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AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE
DECATUR, GEORGIA
VOL. 78
cover design: Susan Glover
1 -^
Ahhh! Summer . . .
and the opportunity to trade
study carrels for lounge chairs and
late night cram sessions for late
morning sleep-ins. Of course, few
Scotties spent the entire summer
recuperating from spring quarter
exams; rather, most stretched
vacation over a week or two before
settling into a job or summer
school. Bank telling, life-guarding,
scooping up ice cream or tackling
Organic — whatever your summer
activity, it very probably affected
your attitude about your arrival on
campus in September.
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On the Road
Melodie Johnson, Pam Mynatt and
Martha Sheppard joined a group
largely composed of Emory under-
classmen for a six-week orienta-
tion into French culture. Based in
Paris, the program offered two
classes each day plus field
trips into the city, tickets to per-
formances at the Come'die Francaise
(France's national theatre) and
several excursions around northern
France.
Twenty-one Agnes Scott students
toured England and studied
"Elizabethan Social History" under
the guidance of Professor and Mrs.
Brown. The group toured such
places as London, Hever, Dover,
Canterbury, Exeter, Oxford, York,
and Edinburgh, Scotland. High-
lights, besides the museums,
cathedrals and palaces, were "chas-
ing sheep across the moors" and
"swooning over Michael Pennington,
who played the title role in
Hamlet."
Nine Agnes Scott students toured
the Great West on the 1980 Desert
Biology Trip. The students collect-
ed and studied plants and animals
native to that habitat and found
time to visit Big Bend National Park
and Carlsbad Caverns. According to
Val Hepburn, they "all grew to ap-
preciate the wonders of that wide
expanse known as the Desert."
Summer Oddities
That's My Job!
Over the summer, a number of
Scotties experienced unusual vaca-
tions that one might not consider
time off. These brave sorts
escaped typical summer routines to
explore new career fields.
THE EYES
HAVE IT
Julie Ketchersid joined the staff
of the Department of Ophthalmology
at Emory University as a Lab Re-
search Technician. Her duties in-
cluded dissecting animal eyeballs
and taking out the lenses. She also
tested eyebank lenses from human
eyes and cataractous lenses from
cataract surgery. Her supervisor
is currently researching a cure for
cataracts in human eyes.
Baby Talk
Chris Veal worked in a
hospital's newborn nursery
caring for babies and help-
ing new mothers learn to
care for them at home.
Chris also helped the nurses
care for the sick babies and
premature infants.
Peaches And
Cream
Marty Wooldridge packed peaches
this summer in Ruston, Louisisana,
and claims the number-one peach
packer position in that orchard!
Some specimens, about five inches
in diameter, were entered for com-
petition in the Peach Festival.
Even though she worked outside under
a hot tin shed and "always came home
scraped and bruised, covered with
peach fuzz," Marty managed to enjoy
the experience.
DANCE
FOR THOSE
WHO CANT
Sarah Campbell spent three
weeks at Duke University
studying Dance Therapy. Then,
she travelled back to her home
state Arkansas to use newly
learned techniques as a dance
exercise teacher at a state hos-
pital. Says Sarah, "Movements
express what's happening in
your mind, and dance therapy can
help to direct these tensions in
a constructive manner so it is
theraputic in nature."
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MIPP
Bartlesville
Is Just No
Place To Be
Lydia Reasor was employed by
Philips Petroleum in Oklahoma.
She worked in the analysis branch
of the research and development
center. Day after day she tested
the content of plastic styrofoam
cups. Lydia's summer was profitable
because she had been interested in
industrial analysis as a career.
However, after this summer, she
decided that this job might be a bit
too tedious.
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STEALIN'
THE SHOW
AT SIX
FLAGS
Jeni Giles hosted the Chevy Show
at Six Flags; and, according to a
friend, the job was "so appropriate
to her wide-ranging liberal arts
education that she found it difficult
to unglue the rancid pieces of
bubble gum that had gathered on the
soles of her tennis shoes after a day
of laboring on behalf of the
'American Arts.'
. . . And A
Heckuva
Engineer
Polly Gregory spent the summer
surveying land, conducting soil
tests, and taking topographical
measurements. Later in the summer
she did some architectural drafting
for an engineering firm in a small
Tennessee town.
RIVER RAT
To Mildred Pinnell, Park Techni-
cian for the National Park Service,
working at the Chattahoochee River
National Recreation Area did not
mean lazy summer fun. In addition
to directing traffic in 100° -I- heat,
getting used to abusive language,
and taking children on nature walks
Mildred also patrolled the areas
along the river, wrote tickets, and
provided information to visitors.
Would she do it again? "Sure, it
beats 9-5!"
THE
SEASONS
CHANGE
and so do I
Agnes, we haven't thought of you for 12
whole weeks, but here we are back in
Decatur, and hey! it's good to see you again!
In silent patience you waited for us to
return, echoing the stillness throughout
your classrooms and corridors.
Age becomes you, Agnes. You're pretty in
the fall. After the peace of the summer you
beam with excitement as all of us return.
We fill your hallways with shouts and
laughter, our voices welcome each other
across the campus, and we catch one last
ray of sunshine on your lawns before the
autumn air reaches us.
Your color deepens as we scramble for
our woolens. The muffled sound of leaves
falling is lost in the shuffle to and from
classes. Something in the air quickens our
pace, and suddenly we're no longer content
to dream the hours away. Suddenly dreams
become reality and our attention is diverted
by football and fraternities, trips back
home, new loves found and lost, and new
classes.
I've changed, Agnes . . . but you'll go on
forever.
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Shh... Black Cat around the corner
Behind The Sieenes
Blaek Cat
It's a crisp, October morning.
You have a paper due in English 101
this morning, and a biology lab
test this afternoon. After a hasty
breakfast, you stumble out to
your 8:30, groggy-eyed after typing
half the night.
Wait a minute — you can't be
that tired — are those shoes
marching along the path to Buttrick?
After a second glance, you find
it's not just any shoe — that's
one of your favorite sneakers right
there in front of the Hub. Sudden-
ly, you remember the whispered
conversations of the sophomores on
your hall, the furtive glances and
mysterious visits.
You're uncertain — what exactly
is Black Cat? And yet you're not
sure you want to know much more.
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4 DANCE
It's three o'clock on Saturday
fternoon and suddenly the quiet
orm becomes a scene of excited
ctivity. There are lines at the
howers and the ironing boards, anc
Ke steady whir of blow dryers fills
he usual afternoon silence. Made
ip and manicured to her
atisfaction, each girl dons the
pecial dress she has kept for just
Kis evening. The phone rings, and
voice from the lobby says, "Your
ate is here." After dinner, she
rrives at the Marriott for an
vening of laughter and dancing,
"oo, soon, the band plays its final
ong, and the night comes to a
lose.
1 BONFIRE
Spirits were blazing as
Mortar Board set the campus
aflame with the Black Cat
bonfire. The senior class took
first place in the song
competition, but originality
had to go to the class of 1982,
as they pogoed to the first
punk-rock sister song in
Agnes Scott history. The Boy
Scouts came prepared and
correctly guessed the new
mascot; the entire campus
welcomed the sailors aboard.
The production, games, and
formal lay ahead, for Black Cat
was only just beginning.
STEPS
TO A
SUCCESSFUL
Black
Cat
J PLAY
The Juniors presented their
production, "A Hub Line,"
Friday night before a large
and enthusiastic audience. The
plot centered around a pro-
spective student's view of
Agnes Scott and featured be-
lievable portrayals of RTC's
and faculty. The play took a
significant place among the
Black Cat activities because
it reminded the audience that
we students have four years
to establish traditions of
2 GAMES
On a warm afternoon in late
October, each class met on the
hockey field to prove its spirit and
athletic prowess. A variety of games
filled the roster — an egg toss, a
pumpkin pie eating contest, a 3-
legged race, and a Halloween relay,
which included bobbing for apples
and donning a witch's costume. The
games ended in a tug-of-war and
the annual hockey match. When the
scores were tallied, the Seniors had
won — for the fourth consecutive
year! In the end the Seniors, with
their victories in Games and Song
Competition, took the cherished
Black Kitty award.
11
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Is There Life
Aftei* Blaek Cat?
Bright, late morning sunshine
floods the room as you crack those
sleepy eyes. New shoes lie careless-
ly discarded under your chair; a
corsage decorates your dresser
where you left it earlier this morn-
ing.
Wiggling toes still tender from
dancing half the night in 4-inch
heels, you sit up and gaze at the
formal hanging on the closet door.
It certainly made you fee! special
last night. So did your date — al-
though you barely knew him when
the evening began, you were
friends at its close. That's the magic
of Black Cat. Now you have a true
memory, better than any sleepy
dream. Smiling, you climb out o'
bed.
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GOOD
It's 5:30 a.m. and the pipes are
clanging reveille. Bleary-eyed all-
nighter victims make one last cup
of coffee as they desperately
struggle to finish a paper or cram in
last-minute facts. The dining hall
cranks up, preparing for the first
onslaught of hungry Scotties. The
light in 226 Buttrick comes on; Mr.
Weber is already busy at work.
Other buildings soon come to life as
Security has begins its early-
morning rounds to open classrooms
and check the dorms. The custodial
staff exchange "good morning's"
across the Quad before they begin
their daily routine.
Early morning risers crawl out of
bed with visions of hot water in the
pipes to stir them to life, while
others lace up their jogging shoes
and head toward the hockey field.
Breakfast addicts wander toward the
dining hall for their first fix of food
and coffee. Others trudge wearily
with books in hand, dreading the
test that can no longer be avoided.
Meanwhile the "lazybones" shut off
the alarm (for the third time),
stumble out of the bed, and throw
on some clothes and head for their
8;30's. Agnes is awake and coming
to life.
14
MORNING. AGNES!
i
Afternoons at Scott can be a
time for relaxation or activity. For
those who have no choice, two
o'clock brings labs, with all their
excitement (or boredom, depending
upon your major). The splashes,
thud of feet, and whacking of balls
can 'be heard from those who are
energetically practicing or re-
lieving frustrations after a long day
of classes. At the same time, ambi-
tious Scotties can be seen heading
for the library to get a jump on
homework and papers.
Meanwhile, the soap opera fans
gather eagerly around the tube
awaiting the next episode of di-
vorce, love, and affairs. For
victims of too much studying or
partying, afternoons also provide
an excuse for a nap and lazy sun-
ning. Finally, five o'clock and
dinner offer a break before
meetings, studying, or a night on
the town.
AMFTIEIRNOOIM OlElLlieiHT
16
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NISliT LIIIFE!
Turn your eyes westward from
the hushed campus of Agnes
Scott and there she is: Hot'lanta!
Piercing skyline lights reaching
up into the blackening sky,
reaching out to her still suburbs,
reaching down to her street
depths. Scan the sky; what do
you see? Atlanta's a landmark
city, distinctive for her gold-
domed capital, Peachtree Plaza
Hotel, Regency Hyatt House, and
(T)ECH tower.
Night life! It's a hot city . . .
and a good one to share with
friends on a cool evening. Two
quarters will buy you a ticket to
adventure on MARTA's new
subway. Speed across the 8-mile
distance on one rail and emerge
in the exciting Omni! Or let a
tank of gas propel you anywhere
around the perimeter. What's
your pleasure?! P.J.'s? Six Flags?
Tech's S.A.C.? Emory's AMUC?
Agnes Scott has been enjoying
the city for over 90 years . .
we're part of Atlanta's tradition!
18
On Campus:
20
sports contact
X
21
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There
Must Be A
Difference
I wear overalls, live in California,
and had never heard of grits before
I came here. You hail from
Charlotte, match pink with green
and talk with a sort of funny
accent, forgetting all your "r"s. And
yet we're roommates.
I struggle nightly with calculus
and economics. You're a math
major, so we study together.
I take a bath in the evening; you
always shower in the morning. Still,
we live together.
Though I like church retreats and
you prefer frat parties, we share
good times together.
Because I am the way I am, so
different from you, we have grown
together.
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22
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Yet We Seem
To Be The Same
"As a member of the Student Body of Agnes Scott
College, I consider myself bound by honor . . .
We are diverse young women from all over the
country, each with different lifestyles, tastes and
interests. What draws us together? Class spirit might
do it, during times like Black Cat. Class pride is a
factor on Honors Day. But there must be more than
that.
Through the Honor Code, each one of us pledges a
responsibility, not merely for ourselves, but for each
other. The mutual trust and cooperation among
faculty, students and administration created by the
Honor System is the section of common ground upon
which we can lay the foundations of our friendships.
It is each Scottie's acceptance of the Honor Code,
and her willingness to use it here as the basis for her
way of life, that more than any other factor unifies
Agnes Scott students and makes us one.
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25
Our questions,
your answers:
YOUR
OPINION
COUNTS
HERE
NEWEST PLACE TO TRY
Topping the survey for the newest place
you said you'd like to try was "Animal
Crackers," located at 3002 Peachtree Road.
Young and old alike can entertain them-
selves in this huge restaurant complete
with two bars, a diversified menu, big-
name showroom bands and the world's only
indoor ferris wheel.
BEST PLACE
TO MEET
A NICE
GUY
who would ever
believe that the
library is the
best place to meet
a nice guy lurking
amongst the rows
of dusty books?
That was your vote;
some of you must
still be looking
for a nice guy.
26
BEST PLACE TO MEET A NOT-SO-NICE GUY
FAVORITE PLACE FOR
PIZZA
The favorite place for pizza is none
other than Everybody's. Also topping
the list were Godfathers and P by C.
FAVORITE PIZZA
Just imagine a steaming hot
pepperoni pizza when an extreme
case of munchies knocks at your
stomach door. Our survey says
most of you do!
BEST DRINKS
And where to find the best
drinks? Georgia Tech football (games!
BEST PLACE FOR A DATE
Because of your diverse tastes,
you voted on no one best place
for a date. Suggestions: movies,
skating, sporting events, or back
to his apartment for dessert.
Dancing was a popular vote, and
Packet's your favorite place.
Plaza Drugs has acquired a few
names in its long history . . .
the most recent being: best place
to meet a not-so-nice guy.
BEST/WORST DESSERTS
Some of you insist that a "bad"
dessert was never created; others
voted for Letitia Pate as its
headquarters. The best may be
found at the Dessert Place.
BEST PLACE TO GO
WITH "JUST THE GIRLS"
Shopping at Lenox was the popu-
lar answer. Where else do we
"get away?" The Omni, Toco Hills,
Excelsior Mill, Lullwater (Park
a/7c/ Tavern), Florida, Northlake
Mall, McDonalds, Arby's, and
our own Hub.
PREFERRED WEND
HANGOUT
"I'll go any place where
books aren't screaming at
me to study them!"
BEST PLACE AFTER
MIDNIGHT
As the clock tolls twelve,
you may find yourself itch-
ing for a short leave of ab-
sence from cram sessions.
Best spot: Krispy Kreme.
FAVORITE BOOK FOR A
RAINY DAY
Escape into the romance of
Gone with the Wind . . . it's
the campus favorite.
FAVORITE INTIMATE
RESTAURANT
The lights are dim. Music
plays in the background.
Slowly, you finish a last
sip of wine or bite of
quiche, savoring every mouth-
ful ... You're at Houston's,
your favorite setting for an
intimate dinner. Others:
Anthony's, The Mooring.
FAVORITE PICNIC SPOT
Picture a sunny spring afternoon at
Stone Mountain where you and friends
can "get back to nature."
FAVORITE GIFT TO GET
To any woman, flowers are a well-
received gift. Make mine roses,
please
BEST/WORST LETITIA
PATE FOOD
Chicken came in number one here;
that infamous liver came in last.
Banana nut bread, French toast,
lasagna, and chocolate chip
cookies also got approvals, but you
voted not to seek the recipe for
rice with raisins, boiled okra,
or any unidentified meat.
BEST/WORST PARTIES
AT TECH
If you're looking for a great
fraternity party, the KA's
reportedly provide the best.
SAE's were further down the line . .
m
WHO WILL YOU
VOTE FOR
FOR PRESIDENT?
No, No! We meant
the U.S. presidential
election! (However, Mr.
Carter was second.)
FAVORITE T.V./
MOVIE
PERSONALITY
Bring on Alan Alda
as the favorite TV and
movie personality!
FAD YOU'D LIKE TO SEE LEAVE
Surprise! Punk and Prep both received their walking
papers in this survey. If you see
someone parading across the campus in either
fashion, inform her that she's against the vote.
(Other fads given the
"Thumbs down ": glitter
lettering on black t-
shirts, dieters, gold
chains on guys, and Sil-
houette surveys.
FAVORITE DORM
HALL
Second Walters and Third
Rebekah answered the most
surveys and therefore came
in first. Good for you!
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29 I
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"Candid, " the fashion
section of Silhouette, invited
Profile editor Lee Kite to partici-
pate in a Liberal Arts make-over, of-
fered only at higher institutions of edu-
cation like Agnes Scott. Before undergoing
lis transformation, Lee's life was dominated by
'the thoughts and aspirations typical of a young woman
about to enter the mystifying halls of academia.
A liberal blushing of humanities, mathematics, natural -
. and social sciences added to a foundation of carefully formu-
lated morals helped to create a new image of Lee. The new Lee has
cultivated a dazzling sense of concern for humanity, both physically
and intellectually. This emergence of hidden beauty will no doubt
polish her present state and minimize the smudges of her later years.
COLLEGE MAKE-OVER
30
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ilf "Y-lf* I
1 DON'T wear add-a-beads too short unless
a) you're missing the fop button of your
button down
b) you believe that investing in gold is
harmful to the economy
2 DON'T wear anklets with bright green
shoes unless
a) you bought them on purpose to match
with your bright green poodle skirt
b) you're going to play tennis and don't
want grass stains on your white
tennis shoes
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3 DO wear pink knee socks
with green shoes if
a) the ultimate preppy
mood comes over you
b) all your hose are in the
laundry
4 DON'T wear a ski jacket
with a dress
unless
a) you're attending a
come-as-you-are party
on the slopes
b) the only way you'll get
off campus this weekend
is to be towed away
5 DO wear pink with grey if
a) they were your high
school colors
b) you want to.
6 DON'T wear skirts with
short boots unless
a) you want to show off
your new pair of socks
b) you really believe that
gentlemen prefer Hanes
a
o
a
en
31
BEING HERE,
LEAVING HERE . . .
32
The good times are definitely here,
and I'm going to get them while I can!
Too soon I suddenly realize that my
days at Scott will be over, and I'll be
left with memories from four years
gone by too quickly. How will I re-
member Agnes Scott? By how many
times I attacked her traditions, ques-
tioned her policies, and criticized her
food? Or will it be the memory of the
joy that came from a warm, special
friend, the excitement of success on a
test, the daily challenge of classes, the
pondering as I grew four years older.
. . . When I return, I'll look over the
new classes: girls of the 21st century.
Will they be like me? Think like me?
Will one of them be mine? They, like
me, will be here to learn about them-
selves, struggle, rebuild, fail, succeed.
... I came here knowing I'd have to
leave one day, and I know, in four
brief years, I will have lived, left . . .
and loved.
,
LOVING
HERE . . .
33
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AGxi;s sc:or"i' coi.ll.gi
HI ' A I I K . (,1 um. : \ ■• 11(1 ■. M
on irr or in
TO THE CLASS OF 1981:
Although Silhouette is a yearbook for all students, these words of
mine are addressed especially to the Class of 1981, a class which leaves
us this year after four full years at Agnes Scott .
First, let me say that all of us whom you leave behind here are very
proud of you and shall miss you in the years ahead. At the same time,
we look forward to following your lives and careers with the same pride
we have taken in our association with you on this campus. Keep in touch
with us; let us know where you are and what you are doing. Keep your
concern for Agnes Scott, for its future course and values, and keep in
mind the values which we have tried to exemplify and share with you here.
Agnes Scott's people are its most precious ingredient. Equally precious
are the ties which bind us here on campus to you who go out into the world.
We hope that you will remember us and will honor some of the things you
have learned here. We wish for you much happiness and satisfaction in the
years which lie ahead of you, and we shall hope to have the pleasure, through
the news you send us, of sharing in a small way the myriad events of your
busy lives. Goodbye for now, and Godspeed!
l/f/UjUM^ f UAAA4
J-Ht
LX
OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT
Above; Bertie Bond, Administrative Assistant and President Marvin Perry. Right: President and Mrs, Perry
35
J! 1 1 JhlA'M <i f'iLJ
DEAN OF THE
COLLEGE
ADMISSIONS
First row: Jan Johnson, Nancy Kinsey, Judy Tin-
del, Director; Carter Hoyt; 2nd row: Mary K. Jaboe,
Faye Noble, Denise McFall, Kalherine Akin, Pat
36
"^ "^
BUSINESS AFFAIRS
Left: Linda Anderson, Administrative Assistant;
Lee Barclay, V.P. for Business Affairs.
Left: Janet Gould, Miriam Lyons, Kate Goodson,
Supervisor; Linda Nuckols, Lelwanda Daniel.
ACCOUNTING
Sara Fountain, Director; Andrea Helms, News Di
rector; Dorothea Markert, Assistant to the Direc
PUBLIC RELATIONS
REGISTRAR
Left: Lee Ann Hudson, Registrar; Rhonda Tate,
Secretary.
39
THE MILLION DOLLAR
The National Endowment for
the Humanities offered Agnes
Scott a $250,000 Challenge Grant
if the College would raise
$750,000 in special gifts by June
30, 1982. This $1,000,000 total for
endowment will strengthen our
academic programs in the
Humanities.
By January 1 gifts and pledges
of alumnae and friends reached
the $150,000 mark and thus
enables the College to claim the
first $50,000 of the Challenge
Grant.
But this is just a beginning!
During 1980 Agnes Scott seeks
gifts and pledges for the
remaining $600,000 ... To
qualify for this Challenge Grant,
gifts and pledges must be over
and above the amount the donor
gave to Agnes Scott during the
period from July 1, 1978 through
June 30, 1979.
Gifts toward the Challenge
Fund may be used to establish
new memorial funds or to
increase an endowed fund whose
income supports an area of the
Humanities . . .
The students at Agnes Scott
will benefit the most from the
Million Dollar Challenge Fund.
Through study and discussions
with professors and classmates,
these young women gain insights
and understanding that enable
them to use their knowledge and
skills effectively. To enrich the
learning environment for which
_Agne^cot^a^on^beei^^^^^
Upper left: Mrs. Calder and Mr. Tumblin at the
Faculty Fund Drive dinner.
Upper right: Dr. McCain reviewing progress of the
Challenge Fund Drive.
Lower right: Dr. McCain, Dr. and Mrs. Perry, and
Sarah Campbell at the Student Fund Drive dinner.
WE'RE OFF TO A GOOD START
40
a.^^
CHALLENGE FUND
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known, the Million Dollar
Challenge Fund seeks to expand
library holdings and encourage
the professional development of
faculty members.
Already one of the College's
greatest assets, the McCain
Library, with its more than
170,000 items, gives students
ready access to the foundations of
a liberal arts education. Yet
today's inflationary costs make it
harder than ever to keep abreast
of the current explosion of
knowledge and its resultant
publications.
While skill, knowledge and
enthusiasm are prime requisites
for an Agnes Scott professor,
acquiring these qualities involves
more than a doctoral degree. The
lifetime pursuit of wisdom
demands continuing study,
research, and writing, as well as
the exchange of ideas with
colleagues through professional
associations and meetings.
Income from the Million Dollar
Challenge Fund will provide
additional opportunities and
support for faculty to have these
kinds of experiences.
For almost a century the
outstanding academic reputation
of Agnes Scott College has
attracted -young women seeking a
superior liberal arts education.
The Million Dollar Challenge
Fund will help assure Agnes
Scott's continuing position as a
leader in higher education. We're
off to a good start!
(Excerpted from a Public Relations
pamphlet.)
Upper left; J.oAnn Regan, Sheila Harkleroad, Dixie
Thomas, Paul McCain, V.P. for Development;
Kaye Hyde, Penny Wistrand, Assistant Director-
/ASC Fund.
Challenge Fund Steering Committee-First Row:
Peggy Davis, Sarah Campbell; 2nd Row; Lisa Pen-
dergrass, Mary Ellen Huckabee, Mary Beth Du-
bose, Valerie Kay, Terri Wong, Susan Barnes, Paul
McCain, Claire Wannamaker.
BUT IT'S ONLY THE BEGINNING
41
Center: Virginia McKenzie, Director; Left: Juliette
Harper ("Jet"), Jean Smith, Betty Smith.
ALUMNAE
OFFICE
Dr. Edward McNair
HISTORIAN
Natalie Endicott, Manager, Alumnae Guest House.
ALUMNAE
HOUSE
43
[iH*yff«"'"Tmminiir
BOOKSTORE
Left: Dee Chubb, Manager; Elsie Doerpinghaus
Assistant.
POST OFFICE
Left above; Ursula Booch, Postmistress. Right
above: Robert Bell.
44
■i^n
Left: Al Evans, Director; Margo Turner, Sgt. Den-
nis Blanton, Lt. Don Scroggins, Albert Bonner,
Capt. Joe Knight, Ron Maitland.
SECURITY
45
CAREER PLANNING .
This was the year of the underclass-
men, the year when we took major steps
towards implementing a four-year career
planning program at the College. It was a
year for several "firsts", a Freshman Ori-
entation program, decision-making with
the sophomores, job-hunting for the ju-
niors, student liaisons in the dorms.
Perhaps symbolic of the changed em-
phasis was the start of CPO's year. In the
past, we have concentrated solely on the
seniors. With our introductory job-hunt-
ing series now well-established, our first
efforts in September were directed at en-
tering students. During a two-part
Freshman Orientation program, we ad-
ministered and interpreted an interest
inventory to try to identify some initial
career directions for these students to re-
search and explore through our off -cam-
pus programs. As a follow-up, we en-
couraged freshmen to participate in the
Shadow Program during the winter and
spring quarters. In previous years, this
program primarily had attracted upper-
classmen.
A four-year program requires "some-
thing for everyone": activities that not
only help students prepare for life after
ASC but assist with more immediate de-
cisions and needs during their College
years. For sophomores, selecting an aca-
demic major in late spring is indeed a
major decision. To help them identify
their own decision-making styles and to
discuss elements that should be under-
stood and evaluated before declaring a
major, we offered a new workshop at the
start of spring quarter. The decision-
making process taught in this session is
one they can use over and over as they
make job, career and lifestyle decisions
throughout their lives.
As mentioned earlier, our senior job-
hunting workshops are well-established
and well-attended. Our tradition of start-
ing them in the fall, however, has meant
that most students did not utilize the
less-pressured summer months between
junior and senior years to begin their job
search. This spring we altered this cycle
with the workshop, "Avoid Senior-itis",
which taught participating juniors how
to use this summer to research employ-
ers and graduate programs, to have in-
formation interviews and to develop a
network of job contacts.
Left: Lockey McDonald, Secretary; Kathleen Mooney, Director; Libby Wood, Assistant Director.
ALIVE, WELL, AND GROWING!
CPO also started developing its
own network of student liaisons
through the help of Interdorm and
individual Dorm Councils. During
this first year that a CPO represen-
tative was appointed from each
dorm, we were fortunate to have a
group of extremely capable and en-
thusiastic students who advised us
about student needs, assisted with
publicity efforts for our programs,
and served as CPO's "voice" during
dorm meetings and discussions.
These new efforts supplemented
the many programs, activities and
resources continuing from pre-
vious years. Working with the
Shadow, Extern and Intern Pro-
grams, Libby Wood expanded the
number of career fields and geo-
graphic locations available for stu-
dent placements. Our ASC (Alum-
nae/Students/Careers) Network at-
tracted an ever larger group of
alumnae who served both as pro-
gram sponsors and informal career
advisers for individual students.
For the second year, "C3PO", the
computer terminal that gives us ac-
cess to the Georgia Career Informa-
tion System, was a valuable re-
source for providing occupational
and educational data to supplement
the materials in our Career Re-
source Room. And our weekly
newsletter continued to spread in-
formation about employment and
employment statistics, graduate
programs and fellowships
throughout the campus communi-
ty-
On the placement side of CPO s
operation, thanks to the organiza-
tional skills of Lockey McDonald,
our employer and graduate school
recruiting program and job referral
system ran smoothly and seeming-
ly effortlessly. She also was respon-
sible for establishing and mailing
credentials files and a major project
this year, catalogued our career li-
brary.
In sum, I would say that career
planning is alive, well, and grow-
ing at Agnes Scott.
Kathleen K. Mooney
Director of Career Planning
47
PHYSICAL PLANT
Left: Vaughan Black, Director; Sue White, Admin-
istrative Assistant.
CUSTODIAL SERVICES
Left; Allen Osborn, Supervisor; Rosa Smith, Assis-
tant Supervisor.
i ';-"
48
Barbara Saunders, Manager.
FOOD
SERVICES
Above: Linda Ray, Head of Snack Bar. Right:
Joanie League, Night Staff.
SNACK BAR
49
■ - ■■'- -- — ^■-' ~^.;.^...i-...:^.^i.>:i:..i^i*.i««a^...iiMi*^«».kim^
ART
iW"^^WffnlU
Marie Pepe, Chairman
Charles Counts
Terry McGehee
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50
Jack Brooking, Chairman
Dudley Sanders
John Toth
MUSIC
KFtw^
lA
Jean Lemonds
Ronald Byrnside, Chairman
Theodore Mathews
51
z
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Jack Nelson
^:-
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^kL^^^^I
52
David Barton
GERMAN
Gunther Bicknese, Chairman
Ingrid Wieshofer
X
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Gordon McNeer
Constance Shaw, Ch.
FRENCH
Claire Hubert
Christabel Braunrot
55
smB:!i!iS!;ii'ii;'iiiai'i;!!fte.iiKiiii
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FACULTY
"Make a joyful noise unto the Lord"-and the
Holiness, banned from civilized churches that
perched white upon hillsides, met in distressful
temples to force stings, wood, and the hides of
animals to render that noise while their eyes pierced
the nests of wasps and hornets to find Yahweh or
Jesus one leaking roof away. The songs they sang
and danced to are now called bluegrass, and the god
long ago became Nashville's Hot-Rise-Plus.
One-room schoolhouses were the second home
for bluegrass. Miners and their families (Farmers
were likely to be shalt-nots.) brought dusty
quarters, dimes, to pay a teacher on night duty for
the music that had spread from roadsides all the
way to Dayton and Detroit. Boys scrunched in the
high windows. Men and a few brave women fit
overgrown joints into desks for children. Girls
stood or hunkered beside their mothers. Everyone
waited long for Bill and Charlie, for Lester and Earl,
or for the best-Carter and Ralph Stanley who had
grown up just down the road.
Even when the band tuned, silence claimed the
schoolroom. Moonshine, fed to the players in the
boys' toilet, gave the spring or autumn air an extra
wildness. Then Bill or Lester or Ralph took one
step forward to say how obliged they were to be
once more up on Back Harricane, Fox Creek. Adults
clapped calluses out of memory. Boys fought for
room to stretch their mouths in whistle.
Time would be no more-for two full hours.
-Bo Ball
Does Your Board Need
A Guest Speaker?
The Silhouette has some
great suggestions, and the
talent is all local:
Mr. Byrnside: Reflections of
the Renaissance
Mrs. Combs: Funerary Art in
Colonial America
Mrs. Dillman: The Social Con-
text of Education in a
Southern Mill Village
Mr. Kuznesof: Conducting
Polymers: Partially Oxidized
Bridge-stacked Metal-
lophthalocyanines
Mr. Parry: Rayle's Theory of
Action in The Concept of
Mind
Mrs. Pepperdene: Age Is
Unnecessary
Mr. Weber: The Creative Man-
agement of Creative People
In addition to these topics,
more general lectures are
perhaps available:
Mr. Bicknese: His German
trans-
lation of A Private Treason
Miss Campbell: Africa
Mr. Johnson: International
Economic Order
Charles Count's response to the question: "What five books would you take
to a desert island?"
>
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1. James Joyce's Ulysses. It was one of the first books that cracked my
imagination while I was in college and studying literature as an effectual
FORM of human expression ... "I will not admit that I have ever really
understood it; I enjoy drinking in the images.
2. A good volume of selected works of William Shakespeare in large type.
3. Robert Pirsig's Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.
4. Michael Cardew's great work Pioneer Pottery.
5. A bound blank notebook-sketch book.
56
This Blessed Plot,
This Earth, This Realm
To a surprising degree England today is
still what it has always been. The weather is
rotten. The countryside is superb. The
guard changes at eleven sharp every day at
Buckingham Palace. The band plays in the
park while people snooze in deck-chairs.
The country is littered with rosey cheeked
babies in prams. Big Ben booms out the
hours, every quarter on the dot, and gives to
every Englishman who hears it the
reassurance that God is still in His Heaven.
The strawberries and cream are divine at
Wimbledon, the gardens are immaculate,
and roses bloom like mad everywhere.
Of course, there are some changes too and
despite the doomsayers they are not all bad.
Fish swim in the river Thames; London is
free of its fogs and the city is brighter and
fresher than it has ever been. There are
fewer bowler hats and rolled umbrellas to
be seen. The streets are crowded with cars, a
surprising number of them Rolls Royces,
Jaguars and Mercedes. The peace of quaint
villages is interrupted by the intrusion of
an automobile but the people-bless them-
refuse to widen their lovely country lanes.
In the stone-walled lanes of Yorkshire one
has the feeling that at any moment James
Herriot might come tootling round the
corner in his Morris Minor. The island is
more crowded than it used to be, and there
are more black and brown faces in the
population, people from the lands of the old
empire, from India and Pakistan and the
West Indies. There are fewer ships in the
rivers, fewer comings and goings along the
old imperial trade routes. But along the
Channel coast new ports have sprung up to
accommodate the bustling traffic between
Britain and her new trading partners in the
Com.mon Market. And strangest twist of all,
in the heart of Old London, at 10 Downing
Street, a WOMAN presides over the
meetings of the cabinet.
Who ever said that England was done
for?
-Michael Brown
Ramblings about an Avocation
"AH that is needed for evil to triumph is for good people to do
nothing." Having majored in history as an undergraduate and
having carefully explored some of the socialist alternatives-I
knew Communists from Yugoslavia, Hungary and Russia when I
lived in France-I am passionately convinced that our capitalistic
representative democracy is, given the constants of human
nature, the best possible system of government. I am equally
convinced of the fragility of our system unless it is constantly
bolstered by citizen activists.
Therefore, I have been a weekend politician many years,
beginning with H.O. Emmerich's campaign for Dekalb County
Commissioner in, I believe, 1962. Emmerich's campaign was an
inauspicious beginning for applied idealism; his constituents
whom I phoned were preoccupied with one issue-the country
garbage-collection services on their street. I quickly learned that
politics is very daily, with a lot of what Jean-Paul Sartre calls the
"pratico-inerte" to it; "pratico-inerte" is perhaps best translated
into Southern as "nitty-gritty." Since then, I have learned to
"clean" voter lists, organize fund-raisers, field radio spots, lobby
the Legislature and-the most enjoyable part-debate and make
speeches heaping fire and brimstone on the Unworthy
Opponent.
Politics as practiced in the Dekalb county Democratic Party (in
general) is among the highest forms of human activity; working
with a group of cherished comrades for the general welfare. We
even love the Republicans, provided they are activists. On the
scale of human values, political activity is just beneath the
creation of a well-turned phrase. We have a very industrious
crowd (Valerie Hepburn and Susan Mason are among the most
industrious!) You could tell immediately when you drove into
Dekalb from Fulton in the 1980 campaign; Fulton yards were
pastoral, nude and uninteresting, while Dekalb yards burgeoned
with the glorious human wealth of many-splendored yard-signs.
-Claire Hubert
57
X
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X
Richard Parry, Cha
David Behan (left)
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Marylin Darling
Joanne Messick
I iiiir —
Art Bowling, Chairman
Bob Hyde
?
■^HrlnVI^^^^^^^^^v j^p
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Gus Cochran, Chairman
Steve Haworth
POLITICAL
SCIENCE
59
60
CHEMISTRY
Richard Swanson
Paul Kuznesof
61
Mary Sheats
Ayse-Ilgaz Garden
° . j^^H
Miriam Drucker
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John Tumblin, Chairman
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Hugh Spitler
Caroline Dillman
63
1
ECONOMICS
lill Weber, Chairman
Ed Johnson
N.J. Citrin
2
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64
Joanne Fowler
MATHEMATICS
Sara Ripy, Chairman
65
SILHOUETTE
Editor-in-Chief: Martha Sheppard
Associate editor: Mildred Pinnell
Business manager: Susan Nicol
Pubhcations consultant (at right): Dan Troy
First row: Tina Roberts, Beth Finklea, Donna Garrett, Ashley Jef-
fries, Colleen Flaxington, Susan Smith, Sharon Johnson, Elaine
Dawkins, Kitsie Bassett, Kim Lenoir; Second row: Andrea Baird,
Debbie Higgins, Lu Ann Ferguson, Chris Veal, Susan Nicol, Martha
Sheppard, Susan Barnes, Mildred Pinnell, Alice Harra, Lane Lang-
ford, Claire Wannamaker; Third row: Lee Ann Chupp, Frances Har-
rell, Marjory Sivewright, Leslie Miller, Claudia Stucke, Cameron
Bennett, Susan Kennedy, Rhonda Clenny, Anna Marie Stern, Me-
lanie Roberts, Gina Philips, Beth Young, Catherine Craig, Susan
Plumley; Fourth row: Chandra Webb, Henri O'Brian, Michelle
Pickar, Tracy Baker, Marcia Whetsel
AURORA
Editor: Melanie Merrifield
Assistant editor; Claudia Stucke
Art editor; Karer\ Webster
First row: Susan Wall, Diane Rolfe, Joyce Thomp-
son, Melanie Merrifield, Karen Webster, Lisa Mer-
rifield; Second row: Claire Dekle, Lisa Willoughby,
Carol Chapman, Pam DeRuiter, Edye Torrence, Lee
Kite, Maggie Taylor; Third row; Carol Colby, Carol
Willey, Joan Loeb, Susan Nicol, Jeni Giles, Ute
Hill, Jeanne Cole, Nancy Nelson
PROFILE
Editor: Lee Kite
Associate editor: Mary Beth Hebert
Business manager: Carol Reaves
1. Nancy Childers 2. Sue Fees 3. Pearl Keng 4. Elizabeth
Smith 5. Cathy Nemetz 6, Amy Dodson 7. Diane Rolfe 8.
Colleen Flaxington 9. Marcia Whetsel 10, Susan Clover 11.
Lauchi Wooley 12. Mary Beth Hebert 13. Lee Kite 14. Ann
Connor 15. Amy Mortensen 16. Laurie McBrayer 17. Nan-
cy Asman 18. Jeannie Morris 19. Kim Kennedy 20. Carol
Reaves 21. Colleen O'Neill 22. Cathy Zurek 23. Susan
Whitten 24. Kathy Nelson 25. Sallie Rowe 26. Catherine
Fleming 27. Tiz Faison 28. Phyllis Scheines 29. Amy Potls
jfm
67
The goal of the Representative Council is
to consider thoroughly and fairly the opinions
and problems of the student body at Agnes
Scott. Major changes concerning student life
originate from Rep Council. Through campus-
wide surveys and a general openness to sugges-
tions. Rep uses student ideas to improve the
welfare of the campus community.
The Council's most popular project this
year brought delighted comments from almost
everyone who visited the Hub after the
Christmas break. Concerned that students did
not have a comfortable, attractive place
to go for meetings, snacks, or relaxation.
Rep Council decided to redecorate the buil-
ding. Invaluable suggestions from Mary
Gellerstedt, new carpeting donated by Warren
Sims and Shawn Industries, Inc., paint pro-
vided by Dr. Perry, and globes for the light
fixtures given by the Decatur Alumnae Club
have all brightened the Hub. A pool table
and a piano are other welcomed additions.
The Council also plans to purchase plants
and to establish a student art display.
Not only has the board aimed to please
popular student opinion by redecorating
the Hub, it has also given a much-needed
facelift to the renovated building.
69
iiiliiilililliiia|lil[litiliii|iliiiiliiMil'^
;y,BI9pBIHa8!tBHBaiaBaffi«i8l8WI!«W«»iiasaim!mawffiiw
e!as'V[mtiiimBmimi;t
Christian
Association
President: Marie Castro
Vice-president: Debbie Arnold
Secretary; Sue Connor
Treasurer: Christia Riley
Kneeling: Christia Riley, Sue Connor;
First row: Claire Wannanxaker, Gina
Philips, Marie Castro, Ellen Dyches, Julie
Babb; Second row: Anita Barbee, Debbie
Arnold, Barbara Boersma
Mortar Board
President: Susan Barnes
Vice-president: Luci Wannamaker
Secretary: Liz Steele
Treasurer: Valerie Kay
Editor-historian: Claudia Stucke
First row: Wendy Merkert, Claudia
Stucke, Luci Wannamaker, Susan Barnes,
Valerie Kay, Liz Steele, Mary Beth
DuBose; Second row: Claire Wannamaker,
Pam Mynatt, Helen Anderson, Ila
Burdette, Susan Nicol, Martha Sheppard;
Not pictured: Sarah Campbell, Ann Harris
71
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Ij ,.,IMWmB<|lty.U,„II.W I J. MM
Orientation
Council
Chairman: Susan Nicol
Vice-chairman: Lu Ann Ferguson
Secretary; Susan Whitten
Treasurer: Claire Wannamaker
Advisor: MolUe Merrick
Bonnie Etheridge, Kay Hyde, Susan Whitten,
MoUie Merrick, Susan Nicol, Margaret
Sheppard, Lu Ann Ferguson, Anne Luke,
Claire Wannamaker
Board of
Student
Activities
Chairman; Pam Mynatt
Secretary-treasurer: Lisa Edenfield
Advisor: Dean Kirkland
Lisa Edenfield, Alice Harra, Pam Mynatt,
Susan Nicol, Henri O'Brian
77.
Social
Council
President: Darby Bryan
Vice-president: Malinda Roberts
Secretary: Meredith Manning
Treasurer; Kitty Cralle
Advisor: Bill Weber
1. Alice Harra 2. Elizabeth Dorsey 3. Elise
Waters 4. Susan Proctor 5. Penny Baynes 6.
Robin McCain 7. Betsy Shaw 8. Laura
Newsome 9. Joy Jun 10. Katie Miller 11.
Maggie Conyers 12. Trudie Cooper 13. Laurie
McBrayer 14. Darby Bryan 15. Meredith
Manning 16. Lynda Wimberly 17. Malinda
Roberts 18. Nancy Griffin 19. Kitty Cralle
73
;isii5i!!!;!iiii»BiiaKBBBii«»aimi!iitiia
Winship
Dorm Council
President; Missy Carpenter
Secretary: Carie Cato
Senior residents: Janice and Tom Laymon
Kneeling: Haley Waters; First row; Bonnie Armstrong, Sallie
Rowe. Missy Carpenter, Alice Todd, Sonia Gordon; Second
row: Carie Cato, Leslie Miller, Pam DeRuiter
Inman
Dorm Council
President: Sallie Manning
Secretary: Robin McCain
Senior resident; Hanna Longhofer
Kneeling: Kim Kennedy; First row: Uisi Inserni, Trudie
Cooper, Sallie Manning; Cindy White, Hanna Longhofer,
Robin McCain
■^
7A
Main
Dorm Council
President: Maribeth Kouts
Secretary: Mildred Pinnell
Ser\ior resident: Linda Palmer
Above: Polly Gregory, Mildred Pinnell,
Maribeth Kouts, Mary Ebinger
Right: Linda Palmer
I
Walters
Dorm
Council
President: Leanne Ade
Secretary: Karla Sefcik
Senior residents: Theresa and Richard
Gillespie
First row: Theresa Gillespie^ Miriam
Campbell, Fran Ivey, Katie Blanton;
Second row: Leanne Ade, Sue Scott,
Priscilla Eppinger, Karla Sefcik,
Richard Gillespie, Susan Sowell, Laura
Crompton
Hopkins
Dorm
Council
President: Tracy Wannamaker
Secretary: Lane Langford
Tracy Wannamaker, Val Hepburn,
Lane Langford
76
IBB rajia timst ]i»iiw.jj!U!in.Tiiiiai..i<!ai,nin-8..l3ililli
Day Students'
Council
From left:
Chairman: Jane QuUlman
Vice-chairman: Claudia Stucke
Social chairman: Nicole Ryke
Rebekah
Dorm
Council
President: Wendy Merkert
Secretary: Elise Waters
Senior resident: Bonnie Stoffel
In front: Wendy Merkert; Second
row: Joy Jun, Bonnie Stoffel, Elise
Waters; Back row: Julie Carithers,
Kathy Fulton
i'!aytWli!!WIH;WI8W8!il«BMailPi™il!iBI8M^^^
College
Republicans
Club
President: Marcia Whetsel
Vice-president: Valerie Kay
Secretary-treasurer: Cameron Bennett
First row: Claire Piluso, Elizabeth Walden,
Laurie McBrayer, Alicia Paredes, Elizabeth
Smith, Sandra Brantly; Second row:
Rhonda Clenny, Tiz Faison, Valerie Kay,
Marcia Whetsel, Cameron Bennett,
Jeannie Morris, Nancy Griffith; Third
row: Laura Newsome, Andrea Baird, Henri
O'Brian, Tina Roberts, Tracy
Wannamaker, Colleen Flaxington, Nancy
Childers, Laurie McMillian
Young
Democrats
Club
President; Val Hepburn
Secretary. Peggy Schweers
Publicity chairman: Lane Edmondson
First row: Priscilla Eppinger, Val
Hepburn, Peggy Schweers, Melody
Johnson, Monica O'Quinn, Pam DeRuiter;
On stairs from bottom: Maggie Taylor,
Joyce Thompson, Celene Howard, Susan
Mason
Election 1980! The newly organized College
Republicans and Young Democrats shifted into
gear for an exciting general election last fall,
campaigning for both national and state elec-
tions.
The College Republicans participated in acti-
vities sponsored by the Dekalb Republican Party
and local candidates. Carol Lancaster of the At-
lanta Reagan Headquarters spoke at several of
their meetings, and on election night members
joined other Atlanta Republicans at the Tower
Place Hotel to watch the returns.
The Young Democrats participated in numerous
campaigns — both in Dekalb County and on the
national level — and enjoyed informative guest
speakers at their meetings. One member even
joined in Jimmy Carter's Peanut Brigade.
A highlight for both clubs was the jointly-
sponsored Political Parties Forum. Designed to
inform the campus community of party postions,
the Forum invited representatives from the
Anderson, Citizens', Democratic, Libertarian,
and Republican Parties to present their parties'
achievements and platforms for comparison and
contrast.
Working For
Awareness
President; Joyce Thompson
Vice-president: Ellen Anderson
Secretary: Monica O'Quinn
Advisor: Bob Leslie
First row: Joyce Thompson, Monica O'Quinn;
Second row: Claire Piluso, Colleen
Flaxington, Beth Young, Cameron Bennett
Phi Sigma Tau
President: Carol Chapman
Secretary-treasurer: Leigh Armour
First row: Karen Webster, Aljce Todd, Wooi
Yi Tan; Second row: Carol Chapman, Mary
Beth Hebert, Libby Potter
79
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Film Series
Chairman: Kathy Helgesen
Vice-chairman: Diane Rolfe
Secretary; Kathy Nelson
Advisors: Penny Wistrand and Steve
Haworth
First row: Kathy Helgesen, Diane Rolfe,
Amy Dodson: Second row: Kathy Nelson,
Melissa Abernathy, Edna Gray, Anna
Marie Stern
Spirit
Committee
Chairman: Meg Miller
Treasurer: Leah Crockett
First row: Rita Miller, Bonnie Armstrong,
Lauchi Wooley, Mildred Pinnell, Julie
Ketchersid, Susan Mead; Second row:
Meg Miller, Kahty Nelson
College
Bowl
Coach: Don Young
First row: Claudia Stucke
Pearl Keng
Cathy Nemetz
Beth Wilson
Second row; Maggie Forsell
Sue Feese
Kathy Helgesen
Third row: Carol Chapman
Ila Burdette
Lisa Merrifield
Colleen O'Neill
I
81
Student
Admissions
Representatives
President: Susan Mead
Secretary: Sarah Toms
Chairmen: Dana Wooldridge, Nancy
Childers, Susan Whitten
Advisor; Denise McFall
First row: Jenny Rowell, Kitsie Bassett, Lane
Langford, Phyllis Scheines, Cheryl Carlson,
Caroline Cooper, Sonia Gordon: Second row:
Barbara Azar, Betsy Shaw, Susan Roberts,
Nancy Childers, Carie Cato, Hayley Waters,
Heathe Sibrans; Third row: Sara Robinson,
Melissa Kelly, Sue Feese, Kathy Fulton,
Connie Patterson, Leslie Miller, Charlotte
Burch, Karen Hellender, Patti Leeming;
Fourth row: Carol Reaves, Sallie Rowe, Amy
Dodson, Celene Howard, Nancy Collar,
Nancy Griffith, Tiz Faison, Susan Plumley,
Cheryl Bryant, Cindy Foster;Fifth row:
Marjory Sivewright, Susan Whitten, Cayce
Calloway, Caminade Bosley, Flo Hines, Anne
Luke, Beth Young, Diane Rickett, Nancy
Poppleton; Sixth row: Tina Roberts, Sarah
Toms, Susan Meade, Susan Sowell, Donna
Garrett, Amy Potts, Sallie Manning, Lisa
Merrifield, Lucia Rawls, Mary Morder,
Frances Harrell, Jeanie Morris, Lu Ann
Ferguson, Susan Boyd
82
Chimo
President: Wool Yi Tan
Secretary: Beatrice Portalier
Advisor: Linda Palmer
Ute Hill, Yu San Chooi,
Catherine Fleming, Wool Yi
Tan, Sonia Gordon, Julie
Andrews, Beatrice Portalier,
Rasanjanli Wickrema, Hue
Nguyen, Choo Kee Loo
SBA
President: Gail Ray
Program co-ordinator: Burlette
Carter
Secretary:treasurer: Monica
Fretwell
Publicity chairmen; Catherine
Fleming, Chandra Webb
First row: Burlette Carter, Gail
Ray, Peggy Davis; Second row:
Cheryl Toney, Crystal Jones,
Tracy Veal, Myric Thompson;
Third row: Victoria Gyebi,
Jonnell Henry, Monica Fretwell,
Catherine Fleming
83
Eta Sigma Phi
President: Carol Chapmar^
Vice-president: Diane Shaw
Treasurer: Sheila Rogers
Secretary: June Derby
First row: June Derby, Diane Shaw, Carol Chapman, Sarah
Toms; Second row: Allyson Rhymes, Sharon Johnson,
Hannah Griffith, Sharmaine McNeil, Barbara Boersma
Spanish Club
President: Virginia Balbona
Board of Directors; Lee Kite, Nicole Ryl<e, Sandra Brantly
First row: Danon Jones, Amy Little, Cathy Zurek, Shari
Nichols; Second row: Catherine Fleming, Colleen Flaxington,
Sandra Brantly, Kathy Nelson, Elizabeth Smith;Third row: Joy
Jun, Stephanie Chisholm, Lee Kite, Virginia Balbona,
Annedrue Miller, Anne Markette
85
iifaaagMSi{«MWiwi!'ii!Mi'Mnt>
B!IIBIMI!limili'«TO»MI»BmiiCiii!l!!3MHI«l«imilllir.lMmWIKiWB^^
Dana
Scholars
President: Lu Ann Fergus
Secretary: Laurie McBraye:
First row: Meg Miller, Laura Klettner, Cathy
Garrigues, Henri O'Brian, Kitty Cralle, Claire
Wannamaker, Meredith Manning, Jody Stone,
Lynda Wimberly, Susan Whitten, Maryellen
Smith, Valerie Kay; Second row: Becky Moorer,
Maryanne Gannon, Lane Langjford, Ann Con-
nor, Bonnie Etheridge, T. K. Wannamaker, Luci
Wannamaker, Kathryn Hart, Susan Nicol,
Kathy Fulton, Susan Barnes, Kim Lenoir;Third
row: Karen Tapper, Pam Mynatt, Lu Ann Fer-
guson, Martha Sheppard, Pam DeRuiter, Amy
Potts, Ila Burdette, Kathy Helgesen, Jane Quill-
man, Marjory Sivewright, Mildred Pinnell,
Claudia Stucke, Susan Mead, Laurie McBrayer,
Scottie Echols
Arts Council
Chairman: Liz Steele
Secretary: Susan Mead
Treasurer: Margaret Phillips
First row: Marion Mayer, Lisa Merrifield, Cathy
Garrigues; Second row: Cindy Hite Nancy
Poppleton, Amy Mortensen, Gail Ray, Karen
Tapper, T. K. Wannamaker, Louise Gravely;
Third row: Margaret Phillips, Liz Steele, Susan
Mead
Lecture
Committee
Chairman: Linda Woods
Student chairman: Martha Sheppard
First row: Susan Nicol, Martha Sheppard,
Wendy Merkert; Second row: Gunthur Bicknese,
Raymond Martin, Alice Levine, Linda Woods,
Ayse-Ilgaz Garden, Sara Fountain
Shakespeare and the EngHsh Renaissance took
center state among the activities sponsored by the
Lecture Comnnittee and the Arts Council. Inspired by
the arrival of the Folger Exhibit at the High Museum
of Art during April, the Festival of the English
Renaissance, as the commemoration was dubbed,
provided a variety of hearty cultural fare to delight the
campus community and to entice off-campus visitors.
Kicking off the celebration was a performance of
Two Gentlemen of Verona by the Alabama
Shakespeare Festival, followed soon by the Agnes Scott
Blackfriars' presentation of A Midsummer Night's
Dream under the direction of Jack Brooking. Winter
quarter offered a performance by the New York
Baroque Dance Company and their ensemble, the
Concert Royal. In addition to these artistic endeavors,
scholars invited by the French, English, History and
Art departments delighted listeners with their
thoughts on topics ranging from "Hamilet's Dull
Revenge" to Sir Thomas More. A special program,
conducted by Ronald Byrnside and Robert Hyde,
linked Renaissance theories of astronomical
phenomena to music of the period.
The year-long Festival culminated on April 23, when
John Toth and Marilyn Darling staged an Elizabethan
Review featuring student artists, and on April 24,
when the campus was transformed into a lively
English Fair. Arts Council and the Junior Jaunt
Committee oversaw the outdoor festivities and planned
the banquet held that evening in the torch-lit
Renaissance Hall.
Arts Council and Lecture Committee extend a
special thanks to Susan Glover ('82) for her
magnificent banner which hung all year in the foyer
of Gaines, and to Pat Arnzen ('80) for her adaptation
of Susan's design onto the posters located around
campus. Through their publicity aid and the efforts of
the Renaissance Committee co-chairmen Linda Woods
and Michael Brown, our Festival of the English
Renaissance enjoyed a huge success.
89
Black-
friars
President: Karen Whipple
Vice-president: Marie Castro
Secretary: Patti Higgins
Treasurer: Ann Harris
Publicity chairman: Amy Potts
Historian: Nagget Kelly
Box Office: Andrea Wofford
First row: Amy Potts, Carol Gorgus, Ann
Harris, Karen Whipple, Marie Castro, Ca-
minade Bosley, Cayce Callaway, Carie Cato;
Second row: Patti Higgins, Melanie Merri-
(ield, Leigh Hooper, Marion Mayer, Colleen
O'Neill, Paige Hamilton, Liz Steele; Third
row: Leanne Leathers, Sharmaine McNeil,
Susan Proctor, Sharon Johnson, Julie Nor-
ton, Lana Smith, Maggie Taylor, Lisa Wil-
loughby, AUyson Rhymes, Jack Brooking;
Fourth row: Amy Mortensen, Frances Har-
rell, Tracy Baker, Michelle Pickar, Maria
Branch, Anna Marie Stern
Margaret Clark
demned."
"This Property Is Cot]-
Miriam Garrett, Caminade Bosley and Greg
Kerns in Step on a Crack.
90
President: Maryanne Gannon
Vice-president of concerts: Mary Ellen Huckabee
Vice-president of membership: Becky Lowrey
Vice-president of publicity: Sonia Gordon
Secretary: Cathy Garrigues
Treasurer: Melanie Roberts
Director: T. K. Mathews
First row: Maryfrances Furr, Mary Morder, Leigh
Hooper, Becky Lowrey, Mary Jane Golding, Ann
Weaver, Katy Esary, Beth Godfrey, Frances
Harrell; Second row: Louise Gravely, Melody
Johnson, Charlotte Wright, Susan Sowell, Cindy
Stewart, Caroline Cooper, Danon Jones, Pat
Ballew, Beth Finklea; Third row: Rachel
McConnell, Martha McGaughey, Jenifer Dolby,
Scott Echols, Pearl Keng, Robin Ogier, Beverly
Bell, Shawn Fletcher, Suzanne Wilson; Fourth
Robin McCain, Lisa Pendergrast, Cathy
Garrigues, Maryanne Gannon, Susan Barnes,
Leigh Keng, Mary Ellen Huckabee, Beth McCool,
Carol Jones, Lisa Yandle, Sonia Gordon, Maria
Branch
London Fog
President". Elise Waters
Director: Mary Jarie Golding
Kneeling; Jan Jackson
First row: Becky Lowery, Kitty Cralle', Elise Waters
Second row: Mary Jane Golding, Susan Nicol
Not pictured: Marion Mayer, Margaret Sheppard
Madrigals
Director: Ron Byrnside
Sue Feese, Tracy Wannamaker, Beth McCool, Gina Philips,
Peggy Davis, Becky Lowrey, Elise Waters, Melanie Miller,
Melanie Roberts
92
Mi|Min|IIIMMHMM,U|UMM{H^
^n'WiffPi
Art Club
Chairman: Hannah Griffith
Vice-chairman: Leslie Dillard
Secretary: Merry Winter
Treasurer: Priscilla Kiefer
Publicity chairman: Susan Glover
1. June Derby 2. Catherine Fleming 3.
Hannah Griffith 4. Priscilla Kiefer S, Leslii
Dillard 6. Merry Winter 7. Susan Mead 8.
Laura-Louise Parker 9. Tina Roberts 10,
Becky Cureton 11. Cindy Foster 12. Kitty
Cralle 13. Chandra Webb
Studio Dance
Theatre
President; Cindy Monroe
Vice-president, costumes; Laurie MacLead
Secretary-treasurer; Ann Connor
Publicity chairman; Ellen All
Assistant publicity chairman; Tobi Martin
Technical director; Sarah Campbell
Assistant technical director; Suzanne Cooper
Advisor; Marilyn Darling
1. Robin Perry 2. Cindy Monroe 3. Sarah Campbell
4. Alicia Paredes 5. Miriam Garrett 6. Suzanne
Cooper 7. Karen Hellende. S. Celene Howard 9. Gay
Dewitt 10. Gail Ray 11. Tobi Martin 12. Marilyn
Darling 13. Beth Shackleford 14. AUyson Rhymes
IS. Ellen All 16. Laurie Lyons 17. Laurie Denker 18,
Laurie McLeod 19. Carla Eidson 20. Dana
Wooldridge 21. Susan Warren 22, Nancy Childers
23. Elaine Dawkins 24. Mari Ibanez 25, Terri Wong
26, Ann Connor
94
T3!'?!!;!Fi!;ira'ii!it:'i™«"»i™i"<tHii»H,»'iii^i.t...i.M^»»iiiiiiiiti wiiarr"- ■"^'
'iFrfT""'"""""^ ■'
Dolphin
Club
President: Lydia Reasor
Secretary: Sue Connor
Treasurer: Melanie Miller
First row: Anne Luke, Karla Sefcik, Kappy
Wilkes, Sue Connor, Diane Rickett, Summer
Smisson;Second row: Lynn Stonecypher,
Merry Winter, Kim Lenoir, Lydia Reasor,
Mary Ebinger, Melanie Miller;Not pictured:
Barbara Patton, Kathleen McCunniff, Rasa
Wickrema
Athletic
Association
President: Lynn Stonecypher
Vice-president: Kim Lenoir
Secretary-treasurer: Leslie Miller
Advisor: Kay Manuel
First row: Elise Waters, Mildred Pinnell,
Lynn Stonecypher, Kim Lenoir, Leslie Miller;
Second row; Ann Weaver, Meg Miller,
Bonnie Armstrong, Amy Potts, Carie Cato,
Sue Feese, Nancy Asman
95
»iiCTii«raraiTn»i«iuiiw^«»»miHviimmir^ii"';i°i'-iaiiiM!!B^^
Hockey Team
Coach: Kate McKemie
Captain: Lydia Reasor
First row; Beth Godfrey, Pearl Keng, Susan Roberts,
Charlotte Ward, Patti teeming, Ann Weaver;Second
row: Meredith Manning, Heathe Sibrans, Meby
Burgess, Hayley Waters, MeUssa Abernathy, Linda
Sohis;Third row: Katie Blanton, Becky Moorer, Lydi;
Reasor, Tammy Jenkins, Suzanne Brown, Mildred
Pinnell, Amy Potts, Carol Goodman
96
'■-■-'-'"•"""•iWiMmii ■■•
1980-81 Tennis Team 1
Virginia Bouldin
Carolyn McCrary
Sue Feese
Meredith Manning
Kathy Fulton
Anne Markette
Nancy Griffith
Teace Markwalter
Uisi Inserni
Sue Mason
Susan Kennedy
Ann Meador
Priscilla Kiefer
Claire Sever
Kim Lenoir
Charlotte Ward
ASC Tennis
Team
Coach: Ann Messick
First row: Meredith Manning, Susan Hutcheson,
Maureen Smyth, EUse Waters, Teace Markwalter,
Uisi Inserni, Carolyn McCrary; Second row: Kim
Genlil, Susan Kennedy, Kathy Fulton, Kim
Kennedy, Becky Moorer, Priscilla Kiefer
1980 Record
ASC vs Georgia College
7-2 Win
ASC vs North Georgia College
5-4 Win
ASC vs Berry College
2-6 Loss
ASC vs Georgia College
6-3 Win
ASC vs Tift College
6-2 Win
ASC vs West Georgia College
3-6 Loss
ASC vs N. Dekalb Community College
3-3 Tie
ASC vs Emory University
0-9 Loss
ASC vs Tift College
7-2 Win
ASC vs West Georgia College
4-5 Loss
ASC vs Georgia Southwestern College
9-0 Win
ASC vs Georgia Tech
0-9 Loss
ASC vs Georgia Southwestern College
9-0 Win
ASC vs North Georgia College
8-1 Win
ASC vs Dekalb Community College
1-8 Loss
}
®© /ABERNATHY
IFIElIi^IHIMIIlMr
Melissa Abernathy
Denise Aish
Barbara Azar
Tracy Baker
Pat Ballew
Elaine Banister
DeAlva Blake
Laura Blundell
Stacey Boone
Caminade Bosley
Allison Boyce
Julie Bradley
Maria Branch
Lynda Brannen
Suzanne Brown
EllbL
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papers . . . tests . . . exams
Maggie Forsell
Donna Garrett
Miriam Garrett
Beth Gilreath
Emily Glaze
Beth Godfrey
Alicia Gomez
Holly Good
Louise Gravely
Edna Gray
Jan Green
Nancy Griffith
Beth Hallman
Kim Hamblen
Fara Haney
Frances Harrell
Virginia Harrell
Freya Harris
Amber Hatfield
Brenda Hellein
Jonnell Henry
Florence Hines
Celene Howard
Mary EUlen Huckabee
Fran Ivey
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COPING
roommates
Julia Roberts
Tina Roberts
Susan Scoville
Elaine Sever
Celia Shackleford
Betsy Shaw
Jennifer Shelton
Morrie Shved
Heathe Sibrans
Lana Smith
Linda Soltis
Helen Stacey
Cindy Stewart
Robin Sutton
Kathy Switzer
Myric Thompson
Cheryl Toney
Edye Torrence
Tracy Veal
Dea Vela
Charlotte Ward
Hayley Waters
Pam Waters
Ann Weaver
Chandra Webb
/ABERNATHY
.(0)]PIHI©ME(n)IEIl
Linda Abernathy
Cheryl Andrews
Andrea Arango
Bonnie Arn\strong
Julia Babb
Kitsie Bassett
Penny Baynes
Beverly Bell
Cameron Bennett
Katie Blanton
Barbara Boersma
Susan Boyd
Miriam Campell
Carie Cato
Nancy Childers
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Class officers: Melanie Miller, V.P.; Nancy Childers, Pres.; Laura-Lou
' Parker, Treas., Kathryn Hart, Sec.
EDMONDSON/i/0.^
BELONGING
Teresa Cicanese
Rhonda Clenney
Nancy Caroline Collar
Suzanne Cooper
Trudie Cooper
Elaine Dawkins
Laurie Denker
Pam DeRuiter
Angela Drake
Lane Edmondson
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DECISIONS
Priscilla Eppinger
Colleen Flaxington
Laurie Flythe
Maryfrances Furr
Lynn Garrison
Mary Jane Golding
Carolyn Goodman
Ruth Green
Maria Haddon
Kathryn Har)
Valerie Hepburn
Cynthia Hite
Karen Huff
Melody Johnson
Margaret Kelly
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Anne Luke
Laurie McBrayer
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"SOPHOMORISM"
grades
Robin McCain
Colleen McCoy
Carol McCranie
Leigh Maddox
Marion Mayer
Anne Drue Miller
Leslie Miller
Melanie Miller
Donna Mitchell
Barbara Moore
Becky Moorer
Mary Morder
Jeanie Morris
SCHWERY/imn
pigging out . . . "the blues"
Kenslea Motter
Kathy Nelson
Shari Nichols
Henri O'Brien
Laura-Louise Parker
Lisa Pendergrast
Claire Piluso
Amy Potts
Melanie Roberts
Susan Roberts
Beth Ronland
Sallie Rowe
Jenny Rowell
Phyllis Scheines
Kim Schellack
Karen Schumacher
Judy Schwery
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Sarah Adams
Leanne Ade
Julie Andrews
Crystal Ball
Anita Barbee
Nancy Blake
Sandra Brantly
Julie Carithers
Missy Carpenter
Kristy Clark
Margaret Clark
Ann Conner
Sue Conner
Mary Stortz Cox
Amy Craddock
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CHANGING
Kitty Cralle
Leah Crockett
Beth Daniel
Peggy Davis
Claire Dekle
June Derby
Gay DeWitt
Amy Dodson
Ellen Dyches
Lisa Edenfield
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^VOLVEMENT
Bonnie Etheridge
Lu Ann Ferguson
Monica Fretwell
Kathy Fulton
Cathy Garrigues
Sonia Gordon
Polly Gregory
Alice Harra
Angle Hatchett
Kathy Helgeson
Patti Higgins
Emily Hill
Ute Hill
Jenny Howell
Janet Hulsey
Susan Hutcheson
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careers?
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capping
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Gail Ray
Carol Reaves
Allyson Rhymes
Christia Riley
Sara Robinson
Diane Rolfe
Elizabeth Ruddell
Nicole Ryke
Victoria Schwartz
Beth Shackleford
Margaret Sheppard
Monica Shuler
Marjory Sivewright
Maryellen Smith
Susan Smith
Christine Veal
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A Woman's Place
when I was invited to be your investiture speaker I talked
informally with several of you about the subject you wanted to
think about on this special occasion. The topic that turned up
again and again was whether these years at this college for
women have made any real difference in the way you will have
to, the way you will want to, and the way you will be able to
live your life as a private and as a professional woman; and,
... if Agnes Scott has made a difference, you want to know
what that difference is, what these four years here will have
been worth to you as a woman . .
If colleges, like those who inhabit them, have identities, then
like those same inhabitants, colleges have secrets, private
centers, integers, out of which they move and in terms of
which they function. Eliot would call this center, this integer,
"the obstinate" and "tougher self". . . . Agnes Scott's "tougher
self" ... is its deeply imbedded and essentially unselfconscious
regard for the worth of the woman, a regard which has
informed this academic community from its beginning and
worked its subtle influence into the very fabric of the
institution . . .
Although never aggressively feminist or overtly engaged in
the present struggle for women's rights, Agnes Scott has always
been a woman's place. It has never subscribed to the derogatory
view, commonly held by society when Agnes Scott was founded
and still prevalent, even in some colleges for women, that
women are intellectually, emotionally, and physically unable to
pursue with any degree of seriousness or success a demanding
course of study in the liberal arts, or in the graduate schools, or
in preparation for the professions . . . Instead, it has tacitly but
tenaciously acted on the conviction that for the woman-as for
all human beings-that which Dante in the Convivio calls "the
proper love of myself, " is, as he says, "the beginning of all the
rest." From the day of its founding this College has been an
academic place which has fostered in its women the discovery
of a sense of self-worth. The College continuously has
conferred a sense of community which, as Howard Lowry says,
"answers to one of the deepest human needs, the need for
belonging,"' exposing the student to her individual weaknesses
but also making her aware of the "shining margin of
possibility for herself and others"' and directing her "to what
she can love and honor and serve." In this atmosphere, at once
protective and provocative, the College has nurtured this proper
self-regard in the best ways possible for a college for women:
by the substance and quality of the curriculum it has
maintained down through the years; and by the kind of faculty
it has sought, got, and kept.
Unlike many women's colleges, which designed their
curricula to accommodate the woman"s so-called ""frailties" and
her role as wife and mother and offered courses in what M.
Carey Thomas, Bryn Mawr"s famous feminist president,
disparagingly called ""elegent accomplishmants,"' Agnes Scott
from its beginning chose a rigorous classical curriculum which
Was steadily augmented by new knowledge, the kind of
curriculum which of itself honors the woman student
intellectually and emotionally. [In 1911] the curriculum leading
to the degree . . . required advanced study in Latin, in Greek or
German or French, in English literature, history, mathematics
and laboratory sciences. Electives were offered in the "new
fields of learning,"' new for undergraduate colleges at that time.
For instance, there was a course in "General Sociology," which
included a study of the legal status of women before women
even had the right to vote. The College still holds to its
conviction that the traditional curriculum of the liberal arts,
continuously infused with new knowledge, recognizes the
woman's ability and her worth, that it serves her in the way it
has served the man down through the centuries as the best
possible basis upon which to build a professional career in law
or business or medicine, and that to interlard this curriculum
now with vacational courses meant to produce salable skills in
the job market would simply be substituting "in elegant
accomplishments'" for those ""elegant"" ones that Agnes Scott
chose never to offer its women. Both demean the intelligence
and the value of the woman by refusing to take seriously her
personal worth and professional promise.
In the first half of this century . . . when most universities
and colleges, including many colleges for women, had nothing
more than a token woman on their faculties, the array of
women professors at this College with Ph.D. degrees from
distinguished institutions was impressive, and the ratio of
women to men on this faculty was staggering. For example, in
1917, of the 20 members of the faculty, 15 were women, 5 of
whom held Ph.D. degrees (in Classics from Cornell; in German
from Columbia; two in Chemistry, one from Bryn Mawr and
the other from Johns Hopkins; and one in Religion from
Wooster) and one held the M.D. from Syracuse University.
Among those holding the M.A. degree on the faculty in that
year were two Agnes Scott graduates who had taken their
advanced degrees from Columbia and Chicago . Neither the
depression nor the war seems to have affected the traditional
constituency of this faculty, for in 1950, with a faculty of 43, 33
were women and, of these, 19 held the Ph.D. degree and 1 the
M.D., and by now there were two Agnes Scott graduates among
those holding the highest degree , , .
Shaped by the great humanities in which she was tutored,
nourished by a faculty that valued self-definition, and provided
always with that sense of belonging that cushioned but
encouraged the risk of individuation, the woman at Agnes Scott
down through the years has discovered that she is "something
worth," as Donne would say. She has learned, too, that this
proper regard for self is exactly what Dante says it is: "the
beginning of all the rest." Out of this proper self-love come all
the great human virtues: "dignity, strength, simplicity, courage,
straightness of spine," (in Danby's lovely words) and the
greatest of them all . . the ability to love another, someone
outside oneself, precisely because one knows and respects and
loves her own person. This sense of self characterized the
Agnes Scott woman . . even in those years when it was a
given of society that woman's place was in the home, taking
care of her husband and children . . . Yet, even in those years
the graduate of Agnes Scott assumed she could honor her
personal self by following a profession, or taking on business,
cultural, or civic responsibilities, and recognize her human need
as a wife and mother without denying either her professional,
feminist right or her private, human need , , .
Now, in the closing decades of the twentieth century, the
woman expects (and is expected) to be both a professional
person and a wife; what was once an option is now an
absolute-economic, social, and personal absolute. And, not all
women have been able to manage this change in their lives .
Joan Didion rebukes [some of them] for turning this chance for
growth and renewal into "totting up the pans scoured, the
towels picked off the bathroom floor . . . '"or, worst of all, for
behaving like "perpetual adolescents"" in throwing over a life
with husband and children to go ""find themselves" in the Big
Apple and there play out "'their college girl's dream" of
""becoming this famous writer"" or being that "'gifted potter."
She goes on to remind them that they have forgotten what it
means to live actual lives with actual men, and in so doing
they are denying to themselves "the real generative possibilities
of adult sexual life." Helen Vendler speaks ... of those who
traumatize [the women"s movement] with what she calls "'the
puritanical regrouping of women without men, the new
theology of male evil" . . and those who call the world, in
Adrienne Rich's burning rhetoric, ""a world masculinity
made/Unfit for women or men."" As Miss Vendler observes . .
none of these radical stances offers "a solution to the problems
they confront.""
It would be presumptuous to suggest that there is any single
solution to all the problems which the awakening of the
woman has provoked ... for years to come she will be coping
with and struggling against what has been called "the real
elements of historical and social evil which contribute to the
oppression of women . ." Nor is there any real doubt that
during these same years she will be working through and
trying to find again a proper relationship with her erstwhile
companion, the man, who has had to endure with her the
predicament of estrangement and who is sometimes as
bewildered and rebellious and fearful as she. During these
years of change and stress, the essence of the woman's strength
and the only constant on which she can depend is her sense of
her own worth, her self-regard. Her proper love of self can be
for her the beginning of all the rest of her life. If this College,
this woman's place, has given you this place in you, its
women, then it, like you, is "something worth."'
-Margaret Pepperdene
(excerpted from Investiture address)
123
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BARNES/ fl^
Virginia Maria Balbona
Atlanta, Georgia Psychology/Spanish
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/BONTA
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nfi© /CHAPMAN
Lee Ann Chupp
Powder Springs, Georgia Political Science
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CONYERS/
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Kelly Ann Coble
Oak Hill, Florida English/Creative Writing
Carol Schneider Colbe
New York, New York History
Margaret Wylding Conyers
Austell, Georgia Art
Jeanne Marie Cole
Philpot, Kentucky History
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/CRAIG
Leslie K. Dillard
Greenville, South Carolina Art
Nancy Elizabeth Dorsey
Pelham, Georgia Political Science
Mary Priscilla Ebinger
Atlanta, Georgia English/Creative Writing
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HAMILTON/iiS3i3
Hannah Mayling Griffith
Atlanta, Georgia Art
Susan Paige Hamilton
LaGrange, Georgia Economics
Karen Arlene Hellender
Longwood, Florida Chemistry
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JEWETT/fl;
Deborah Gay Higgins
Virginia Beach, Virginia Political Science
Margaret Mitchell Hodges
Stone Mountain, Georgia Psychology
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Beth Anne Jewett
Baltimore, Maryland Psychology
Leigh Clifford Hooper
Birmingham, Alabama Fine Arts
Christina McLeod Lawes
Kennett Square, Pennsylvania Chemistry
Maureen Kennedy Lach
Roswell, Georgia Art
nmm /Fm A Big Girl Now
LOVE BOAT
You know she's engaged when she . . .
. . . runs through the dining hall wet.
. . . flashes her left hand around.
. . . notices domestic things like houses and
dishwashers.
... is "spacey " and can get away with it.
. . . replaces Glamour for Modern Bride.
. . . isn't worried about what she'll be doing
10 years from now.
. . . talks about "our car" instead of "his
car."
. . . gets phone calls from "him" in the
morning and at night.
. . . watches the stock market to see if the
price of silver rises or falls.
. . . starts looking for the dress that makes
every size, shape, and hair color look
good.
. . . sees graduation as only a crossroad on
her way to being married.
ON YOUR
OWN NOW
Leaving behind something familiar,
precious simply because it's rou-
tine, and starting out again.
Leaving behind phone duty for
58 other girls.
What will it be like to be in our
own apartments . . .
What will we do without our
Sarahs?
to find new jobs, to begin the
lives we've been preparing for so
long.
Admissions promised that em-
ployers hire liberal arts
graduates. Which employers,
Judy?
This is our challenge . . .
to make a meal from the yogurt
and the head of lettuce sitting
in the refrigerator.
and we will meet it . . .
or him?
seriously, wholeheartedly, but
with a lot of fun along the way.
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Where Will I Be Next Season?/ ng^^^j
PAPER CHASE
You know she's applying to
grad school when . . .
her roommate keeps asking if four
years of torture aren't enough.
she can't find her econ paper for
the piles of catalogues.
her major professor stifles a groan
when she asks for the fifth letter
of recommendation.
she spends perfectly good Saturdays
at Emory making ovals on answer
sheets with a No. 2 lead pencil.
you have to help write her auto-
biography in 10 words or less.
she'a convinced those official-
looking letters contain her whole
future.
she interrupts all the deans to
shout, "I'm accepted!"
ITS A
LIVING
An A.S.C. B.A. may be the key to fame
and fortune, but for Scotties C.P.O. can be-
come the real initials of the future. As sen-
iors realize each year, it isn't enough just to
leave the red-brick nest — one has to have
somewhere to go.' Finding our "place in the
sky" begins with resumes, career-planning
workshops, letters, lists, and interviews, in-
terviews, INTERVIEWS. Tomorrow's busi-
ness executives turned up exceptionally ear-
ly in the morning, dressed suspiciously
well, and smiled their brightest for those
all-important 30-minute corporate encoun-
ters. But it wasn't the cosmopolitan man-
ners or Neiman-Marcus labels that landed
jobs — it was good old liberal arts intelli-
gence!
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NOIR
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I
Martha Kimbrough Lenoir
Greenville, Mississippi Biology/Economics
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Sarah Leser
Atlanta, Georgia English
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Joan Hance Loeb
Atlanta, Georgia English/Creative Writing
Chu Kee Loo
Penang, Malaysia Economics/English
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McCUNNIFF/M
Laura Lee McCrary
Augusta, Georgia Economics
Kathleen Anne McCunniff
Macon, Georgia Economics
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[cDONALD
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PERRIN/ fl«!
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Virginia Dickson Philips
Charlotte, North Carolina Economics
» » •
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Jane Quill man
Atlanta, Georgia English/Creative Writing
Laura Dorsey Rains
Atlanta, Georgia Art
Lucia Wren Rawls
Columbia, South Carolina Political Science/English
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ROGERS/ 31
Sheila Jean Rogers
Marietta, Georgia English/Creative Writing
Malinda Stutts Roberts
Atlanta, Georgia Economics
1141© /SEGARS
Stephanie Anne Segars
Tampa, Florida Economics
m
Denise S. Severson
Doraville, Georgia History
, J
Diane Shaw
Annadale, Virginia Medieval Studies
Martha Thomson Sheppard
Laurens, South Carolina French
Sandra Keys Sprague
Tarpon Springs, Florida Sociology
llfi)(
/STONECYPHER
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TOWNSEND/agn
Sarah Elizabeth Toms
Waynesboro, Virginia Psychology
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WIMBERLY/llJ
Karen E. Whipple
Decatur, Georgia Theatre
Betsy Wech
Stone Mountain, Georgia Art
Lynda Joyce Wimberly
Brentwood, Tennessee Chemistry
Carol Anne Willey
Atlanta, Georgia EngUsh
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/WISEMAN
Harriett Wiseman
Decatur, Georgia History
Terri Wong
Dunwoody, Georgia German
Debra N. Yoshimura
Atlanta, Georgia Psychology
V>iMiniMM«miwiiim
A
Abernathy, Linda Diane '83-106
Abcrnathy, Melissa Glenn '84-80, 96, 98
Adams, Sarah Estelle '83-114
Ade, Leanne '82-70, 76, 90, 114
Aish, Denise Elaine '84-98
Alden, Cynthia '81-124
All, Mary Ellen '82-94
Anderson, Ellen Ann '81-124
Anderson, Helen Ruth '81-70, 71, 124
Andrews, Cheryl Fortune '83-68, 106
Andrews, Julia Lynn '82-83, 114
Arangno, Andrea Alexandra '83-106
Armour, Martha Leigh '81-124
Armstrong, Bonnie Lin '83-74, 80, 95,
106
Arnold, Deborah Peggy '81-71, 125
Asman, Nancy Anne '82-67, 95
Azar, Barbara Dulaney '84-82, 98
B
Babb, Mary Julia '83-68, 71, 84, 106
Baird, Andrea Marie '81-66, 78, 125
Baker, Tracy Leigh '84-66, 84, 90, 98
Balbona, Virginia Maria '81-85, 125
Ball, Crystal Anne '82-114
Ballew, Patricia Annette '84-98
Bannister, Laura Elaine '84-98
Barbee, Anita Patricia '82-70, 71, 114
Barnes, Susan Sanders '81-66, 68, 71, f
INIIEX
91, 125
Bassett, Mary Katherine '83-66, 82, 106
Batten, Jeanne Brisson '82-118
Baynes, Penny Ann '83-68, 73, 106
Bell, Beverly Ellen '83-91, 106
Bennett, Laura Cameron '83-66, 78, 79,
106
Blake, deAlva Anne '83-98
Blake, Nancy Lynn '82-70, 114
Blanton, Katherine Friend '83-76, 96,
106
Blundell, Laura Avalee '84-98
Boersma, Barbara Lynn '83-71, 85, 106
Bonta, Katherine Kelly '81-126
Boone, Stacey Ann '84-98
Borck, Suzanne Marston Unc.-120
Bosley, Bess Caminade '84-82, 90, 98
Boyce, Allison Jean '84-98
Boyd, Wanda Susan '83-82, 106
Bradley, Julie Ann '84-98
Branch, Maria Barbara '84-84, 90, 91, 98
Brannen, Lynda Anne '84-98
Brantly, Sandra Norrell '82-78, 85, 114
Breitling, Melissa Amelia '81-126
Brock, Nancy Louise '81-126
Brown, Suzanne Lenore '84-73, 126
Bryan, Darby Dale 81-73, 126
Bryant, Cheryl Lynn '84-82, 98
Burch, Charlotte Elizabeth '84-82, 98
Burdette, Ila Leola '81-70, 71, 81, 86, 127
Burgess, Mary Emily '84-96, 98
I
Callaway, Cayce Lyn '84-82, 90, 98
Campbell, Sarah '81-94, 127
Campbell, Miriam Ann Carithcrs, Julie
Lynn '82-77, 114
Carlson, Cheryl Ann '84-82, 98
Carpenter, Margaret Karoiyi '82-70, 74,
114
Carter, Willieta Burletle '82-83
Castro, Marie Evelyn '81-71, 90, 127
Cato, Carie Marie '83-74, 82, 90, 95, 106
Chan, Wee-Leng '81-127
Chapman, Carol Ruth '81-67, 79, 81, 85,
128
Childers, Nancy Duggan '83-67, 78, 82,
94, 106, 107
Chisholm, Stephanie Jane '81-85, 128
Chooi, Yu San '81-83, 128
Chupp, Lee Ann '81-66, 128
Cicanese, Teresa Leigh '83-107
Clark, Christina Sue 82-114
Clark, Mary Margaret '82-68, 114
Clenncy, Rhonda Lynn '83-66, 78, 107
Coble, Kelley Ann '81-129
Colbe, Carol '81-67, 129
Cole, Jeanne Marie '81-67, 68, 129
Collar, Nancy Caroline '83-82, 107
Conner, Carol Ann '82-67, 86, 94, 114
Connor, Susan Leigh '82-71, 95, 114
Conyers, Margaret Wylding '81-73, 129
Cooper, Caroline Lebby '84-68, 82, 91, 98
Cooper, Elizabeth Suzanne '83-94, 106
Cooper, Trudie Bernadette '83-73, 74,
107
Covert, Sharon Unc.-120
Cox, Mary Stortz '82-114
Craddock, Amy Susan '82-114
An Agnes Scott First
Question: What do Kris Kristofferson, Pat Haden and Ila
Burdette have in common? Answer: They are all Rhodes
Scholars! Ila is the first Agnes Scott student and the first
woman from Georgia to receive such an honor. This
prestigious scholarship is awarded to only 32 American
college students each year who, along with their
international colleagues, will have the opportunity to study
for two or three years at the University of Oxford in
England.
1980 marked the first year that Agnes Scott has
nominated a student to compete for these scholarships,
although they have been open to women since 1976. The
scholarship is named for Cecil Rhodes, a British colonial
pioneer and statesman who specified in his will that each
recipient have the following qualities; "literary and
scholastic attainments; truthfulness, courage, devotion to
duty, sympathy for and protection of the weak, kindliness,
unselfishness, and fellowship; exhibition of moral force of
character and of instincts to lead and to take an interest in
one's contemporaries; physical vigor, as shown by fondness
for and success in sports." Her friends agree that Ila meets
all of these requirements easily!
Although she is a math major at Agnes Scott, Ila will
pursue at Oxofrd a master's degree in English. After
completing her studies there, she plans to return to America
to study architecture, her intended career.
155
Craig, Catherine 81-66, 130
Cralle, Katherine Fontaine '82-73, 86,
92, 93, lis
Crawford, Meri Lynn '84-84, 98
Crockett, Leah Ellen '82-91, 115
Crompton, Laura Carolyn '83-76
Cureton, Rebecca Randolph '84-84, 93,
98
Curnutt, Ann Elizabeth '81-130
Custer, julianna Webb '84-98
II
Daniel, Elizabeth Frances 82-115
Davis, Peggy Elizabeth '82-68, 83, 92,
115
Dawkins, Elaine Alison '83-66, 84, 94,
107
Dekle, Claire '82-67, 115
Denker, Laurie '83-94, 107
Derby, June Williams '82-85, 93, 115
DeRuiter, Pamela Ruth 83-67, 74, 78,
84, 86, 107
DeWitt, Jane Gay 82-94, 115
Dillard, Leslie Karen 81-93, 130
Dodson, Amy Pyle '82-67, 80, 82, 115
Dolby, Jennifer Helen '84-68, 91, 98
Dorsey, Nancy Elizabeth '81-73, 130
Drake, Angela '83-68, 107
Dubosc, Mary Elizabeth '81-71, 84, 131
Durie, Rebecca Curry '81-131
Dyches, Ellen '82-71, 115
I
Ebinger, Mary Priscilla 81-75, 95, 131
Echols, Martha Scott '83-70, 86, 91
Edenficid, Norma Elizabeth '82-72, 115
Edmondson, Susan Lane '83-107
Edwards, Katherine K. '84-100
Eidson, Caria Ann '84-94, 100
Ellington, Julie Ann '81-131
Eppingcr, Priscilla Elaine '83-76, 78, 108
Esary, Kate Boyd '84-91, 100
Etheridge, Bonnie Cay '82-72, 84, 86,
115, 116
Evans, Mary Samantha '84-100
I
Faison, Elizabeth Yates '84-67, 78, 82, 84,
100
Feese, Suzanne Celeste '84-67, 81, 82, 92,
95, 100
Ferguson, Lu Ann '82-66, 72, 82, 86, 116
Finklea, Elizabeth Gregory '84-66, 91,
100
Fisher, Donna-Marie '84-100
Flaxinglon, Leslie Colleen '83-66, 67, 78,
79, 85, 108
Fleming, Catherine Este'.le '84-67, 83, 85,
93, 100
Fletcher, Shawn Elaine '84-91, 100
Flythe, Laurie Elizabeth '83-108
Forsell, Margaret Ellen 84-81, 101
Fortes, Luz Maria '81-132
Foster, Sara Lucinda '82-82, 93
Foust, Jacque Nioma '81-132
Fretwell, Monica Elaine '83-83, 116
Fulton, Kathleen Bell '82-77, 82, 86, 97,
116
Furr, Maryfrances '83-91, 108
I
Gannon, Maryanne Elizabeth '81-86, 91,
132
Garrett, Donna Lynn '84-66, 82, 101
Garrett, Miriam Elaine '84-94, 101
Garrigues, Catherine Elizabeth '82-86,
87, 91, 116
Garrison, Lynn '83-108
Gerhardt, Elizabeth Morton '81-132
Giles, Jennifer Louise '81-67, 70, 133
Gilreath, Ann Elizabeth '84-84, 101
Glaze, Emily Gilbert '84-101
Glover, Susan Gay '82-67
Godfrey, Elizabeth Lee '84-91, 96, 101
Golding, Mary Jane '83-91, 92, 108
Gomez, Alicia M. '84-101
Good, Holly Campbell '84-101
Goodman, Carolyn Rose '83-68, 84, 96,
108
Gordon, Sonia Hall 82-74, 82, 83, 84,
91, 116
Gorgus, Carol '81-90, 133
Gravely, Louise Beavon '84-87, 91, 101
Gray, Edna Floy '84-80, 84, 101
Green, Jan Elizabeth '84-84, 101
Green, Ruth S. 82-108
Gregory, Pauline Harriet '82-75, 116
Griffin, Nancy Lee 81-73
Griffith, Hannah Mayling '81-85, 93,
133
Griffith, Nancy Ellen '84-78, 82, 101
Gycbi, Victoria '84-83
H
Haddon, Maria Ann '83-108
Hallman, Elizabeth Gaines '84-101
Hamblen, Kimberley Ann '84-101
Hamilton, Susan Paige '81-90, 133
Haney, Fara Ann '84-101
Haralson, Mary Constance P/T '81-134
Harra, Alice Virginia '82-66, 72, 73, 115,
116
Harrell, Frances Witherspoon '84-66, 82,
84, 90, 91, 101
Harrell, Helen Virginia '84-84, 101
Harris, Ann Douglas '81-90, 134
Harris, Freya '84-101
Hart, Kathryn '83-86, 107, 108
Hatchetl, Angela Lamar '82-116
Hatfield, Amber June '84-101
Hebert, Mary Elizabeth '81-67, 68, 79,
134
Helgeson, Kathy Lucille '82-80, 81, 86,
lis, 116
Hellein, Brenda Marie '84-101
Hellender, Karen '81-82, 94, 134
Henry, Nancy Jonnell '84-83, 101
Hepburn, Valerie Ann '83-76, 78, 108
Higgins, Deborah Gay '81-66, 135
Higgins, Patricia Louise '82-90, 116
Hill, Emily Carter '82-116
Hill, Ute '82-67, 83, 84, 116
Hines, Florence Wade '84-82, 101
Hite, Cynthia Lynne '83-84, 87, 108
Hodges, Margaret '81-135
Hooper, Leigh Clifford '81-90, 91, 135
Howard, Cclenc Renee '84-78, 82, 94,
101
Howell, Jennifer Margaret '82-68, 116
Huckabee, Mary Ellen '84-70, 91, 101
Huff, Karen Keefer '83-108
Hulsey, Janet Patrice '82-116
Hutcheson, Susan Dianne '82-97, 116
Hyde, Kaye K. P/T '83-72
I
Ibanez, Analida '84-94, 117
Inserni, Maria Luisa '83-74, 97
Ivey, Fran Elise '84-76, 101
.1
Jackson, Jan Antoinette '82-92, 117
Jackson, Kathryn Elizabeth '84-102
Jeffries, Ashley Mack '82-66, 117
Jenkins, Margaret Keller '84-99, 102
Jenkins, Tammy Lynne '84-96, 102
Jennings, Elsie Janine '82-117
Jewelt, Beth Anne '81-135
Johnson, Melody Anne '83-78, 91, 108
Johnson, Sandra Thome '82-117
Johnson, Sharon Leigh '82-66, 85, 90,
117
Jones, Carol Jean '84-91, 102
Jones, Crystal Maria '84-83, 102
Jones, Eva Danon '84-85, 91, 102
Jun, Joy Lyn '82-73, 77, 85, 117
K
Kaiser, Karen Elizabeth '84-102
Kay, Valerie Bryce '81-68, 71, 78, 86, 136
Kelly, Margaret Benevieve '83-108
Kelly, Melissa Jane '82, 117
Keng, Leigh Lee '83-91, 109
Keng, Pearl Pei '84-67, 81, 91, 96, 102
Kennedy, Kimberley Reed '83-67, 74, °r7 ,
109
Kennedy, Susan Gail '81-66, 97, 136
156
Kctchersid, Julc Annette '83-80, 109
Kicfer, Priscilla Jane '81-93, 97, 136
Kimsey, Lucy '84-102
Kite, Mary Lee '82-67, 85, 117
Klcttner, Laura Hays '81-68, 86, 136
Komar, Stephanie '81-137
Kouts, Maribeth Madeline '81-70, 74,
137
I
Lach, Maureen '81-137
Langford, Cecily Lane '83-66, 76, 82, 86,
109
Lawes, Christina McLeod '81-137
Leary, Denise Ann '83-68, 109
Leeming, Patricia Louise '84-82, 96, 102
Leffingwell, Bonnie Lee '83-109
Lenoir, Martha Kimbrough '81-66, 68,
86, 95, 140
Leser, Sarah Barto '81-140
Lewis, Katherine Goodwin '82-68, 117
Lewis, Marian Lansdell Meiere '84-102
Little, Amy Elizabeth 83-85, 109
Lloyd, Baird Nellins '83-109
Loeb, Joan Hance P/T '81-67, 140
Loo, Chu Kee '81-83, 140
Looi, Kok Yean '81-141
Love, Deborah Jean '82-117
Lowe, Kathy Lynne '84-102
Lowrey, Helen Rebecca '82-91, 92, 117
Luke, Elizabeth Anne '83-72, 82, 95, 109
Lyon, Virginia Ruth '82-117
Lyons, Leslie Kay '84-94, 102
iU
McBrayer, Laurie Kcrlen '83-67, 73, 78,
86, 109
McCain, Roberta Ann '83-73, 74, 91, 110
McConnell, Rachel Elizabeth 84-91, 102
McCool, Beth Beusse '84-91, 92, 102
McCoy, Colleen Ann '83-110
McCranie, Virginia Carol '83-110
McCrary, Carolyn Ann 81-97, 141
McCrary, Laura Lee '81-68, 141
McCullough, Sarah Hudson 84-102
McCunniff, Kathleen Anne '81-141
McDonald, Susan E. 81-142
McCaughcy, Martha Patterson '81-91,
142
McLemore, Valli Elizabeth 84-103
McMillian, Laurie Frances 81-78, 142
McNeil, Glenda Sharmaine '83-85, 90
Mackey, Joan Marx '83-117
MacLeod, Laurie Muriel '83-94
Maddox, Joy Leigh 83-110
Manning, Elizabeth Meredith '82-73, 86,
96, 98, 117
Manning, Sallie Taylor 83-70, 74, 82,
117
Marchand, Marie Jcannette '82-118
Markette, Anne Preston 84-85, 103
Markwalter, Theresa Robider 82-97, 118
157
gsBaaiiiKimMiMwaimmiiJMiMraiariS
Martin, Carole Marie '84-103
Martin, Tobi Roxane '82-94, 118
Mason, Susan Gayle '84-78, 103
Mayer, Marion Katherine '83-87, 90, 110
Mazza, Denisc '84-103
Mead, Susan Virginia '82-80, 82, 86, 87,
93, 118
Meade, Mary Elizabeth '84-103
Meador, Ann Elizabeth '84-103
Merkert, Wendy Anne '81-70, 71, 77, 87,
142
Merrifield, Lisa Lynn '81-67, 81, 82, 86,
143
Merrifield, Melanie Ann '81-67, 90, 143
Michael, Terry 82-118
Michelson, Mary Susanna D. '84-103
Miller, Anne Druce '83-85, 110
Miller, Katherine Love '82-73, 118
Miller, Leslie Jean '83-66, 74, 82, 95, 110
Miller, Margaret Renee '82-80, 86, 95,
118
Miller, Melanie Frances '83-92, 95, 107,
110
Miller, Rita Elaine '84-80, 103
Mitchell, Donna Neel '83-110
Molegoda, Niranjani Shariya '81-143
Monroe, Cynthia Rhoden '82-94, 118
Moore, Barbara '83-110
Moorer, Anna Rebecca '83-70, 86, 96, 97,
110
Morder, Mary Jane '83-68, 82, 90, 110
Morris, Jeanie Louise '83-67, 78 82, 110
Mortensen, Amy Irene '83-o7, 8" '""O
Motter, Kenslea Ann '83-111
Musser, Janet Ann '82-118
Mynatt, Pamela Deborah '81-71, 72 S
143
K
Neill, Ann Mason '84-103
Nelson, Kathleen Renee '83-67, 80, 85,
111
Nelson, Nancy Alexander '81-67, 144
Nemetz, Catherine Regina '84-67, 81
Newsome, Laura duPre '81-73, 68, 144
Nguyen, Hue Thi-Ngoc '84-83, 84
Nichols, Shari Lee '83-85, 111
Nicol, Susan French '81-66, 67, 71, 72,
86, 87, 92, 144
Norton, Julie Marie '84-90, 99, 103
o
O'Brien, Henrietta '83-66, 72, 78, 84,
86,111
Oglesby, Katherine Joyce '82-118
Oliver, Julie Anne '81-84, 144
O'Neill, Colleen Patricia '84-67, 81, 90,
103
O'Quinn, Monica Susan '81-78, 79, 145
Owen, Barbara Payne '82-118
Page, Anne Spencer '84-103
Paredes, Marta Alicia '84-78, 94, 103
Parker, Laura-Louise '83-93, 107, 111
"arrish, Kim McCart '81-145
Patterson, Constance Crane '84-82, 103
Patton, Barbara Massey '81-145
Peek, Mary Denise '82-118
Pendergrast, Lisa Carol '83-91, 111
Perrin, Shannon Elizabeth '81-145
Perry, Robyn Renea '84-94
Phillips, Virginia Dickson '81-66, 71, 92,
146
Phillips, Margaret Melanie '82-87, 118
Pickar, Michelle Denise '84-66, 84, 90,
103
Piluso, Claire Louise '83-78, 79, 111
Pinnell, Mildred Marie '82-66, 75, 80,
06, 95, 96, 118
Plumley, Martha Susan '82-66, 82, 118
Poppleton, Nancy Elizabeth '84-82, 87,
103
Portalier, Beatrice Unc.-83, 84, 120
Potts, Amy Wynelle '83-67, 82, 84, 86,
90, 95, 96, 111
Price, Linda Louise '84-103
Proctor, Susan Alice '82-70, 73, 90, 118
Quillman, Jane '81-68, 77, 86, 146
il-68, 7'
Rains, Laura Dorsey '81-146
Rawls, Lucia Wren '81-68, 82, 146
Ray, Gail Antionette '82-83, 87, 94, 119
Reasor, Lydia Ann '81-95, 95, 147
Reaves, Caroline McKinney 'S2-(>7, 82,
119
Rhymes, Allyson '82-85, 90, 94, 119
Richards, Beth Ann 81-147
Rickett, Diane Kay '84-82, 84, 91, 95,
103
Riley, Christia Dawn '82-71, 119
Roberts, Charlotte Justine '84-66, 78, 82,
84, 93, 104
Roberts, Julia Johnston '84-104
Roberts, Malinda Stutts '81-73, 147
Roberts, Melanie Katherine '83-66, 92,
111
Roberts, Susan Heath '83-82, 96, 111
Robinson, Sara Louise '82-82, 119
Rogers, Sheila Jean '81-147
Roland, Elizabeth Karen '83-111
Rolfe, Diane Evelyn '82-67, 80, 119
Rowe, Sallie Ashlin '83-67, 74, 82, 111
Rowell, Jennifer Leigh '83-82, 111
Ruddell, Elizabeth Ann '82-119
Ryke, Nicole Pittman '82-77, 119
s
Scheines, Phyllis Martha '83-67, 82, 111
Schellack, Kerri Kim '83-111
Schumacher, Karen Sue '83-111
Schwartz, Victoria '82-119
Schweers, Mary Margaret '83-78
Schwery, Judith '82-111
Scott, Suzanne Robertson '83-76, 112
Scoville, Susan Land '84-104
Sefcik, Karia '83-76, 95, 112
Segars, Stephanie Anne '81-70, 148
Sever, Margaret Claire '84-104
Severson, Denise '81-148
Shackleford, Ceclia Marie '84-104
Shackleford, Elizabeth L. '82-94, 119
Sharp, Emily Allison '84-112
Shaw, Margaret Elizabeth '84-73, 82, 104
Shaw, Shari Diane '81-85, 148
Shelton, Jennifer Lee '84-104
Sheppard, Margaret Colburn '82-72, 119
Sheppard, Martha Thomson '81-66, 71,
84, 86, 87, 148
Shirley, Margaret Ellis P/T '81-138, 149
Shuler, Monica Diane '82-119
Shved, Morrie '84-104
Sibrans, Katherine Heathe '84-82, 96,
104
Siverwright, Marjory '82-66, 68, 82, 86,
119
Smisson, Summer lone '83-68, 95, 112
Smith, Dorothy Claire 83-112
Smith, Elisabeth Ruth '83-67, 78, 85, 112
Smith, Lana Jo '84-90, 104
Smith, Maryellen Palmer '84-90, 104
Smith, Susan P/T '81-149
Smith, Susan Lydston '82-66, 119
Sncll, Margaret Ruth '83-112
Soltis, Linda Lee '84-96, 104
Sowcll, Susan Ann '83-76, 82, 91, 112
Sprague, Sandra Keys '81-149
Spratt, Melinda Vail '83-112
Stacey, Helen Lee '84-104
Steele, Elizabeth Dotson '81-71, 87, 90,
149
Stern Anna Marie Preciado '83-66, 90,
112
Stewart, Cynthia Ann '84-84, 91, 98, 104
Stone, Jody Renea '83-68, 86, 113
Stonecypher, Lynn Pace '81-95, 150
Stucke, Claudia '81-66, 67, 71, 77, 81, 86,
150
Sturkie, Sara Elizabeth '84-113
Suggars, Christine Anne '81-150
Sutton, Robin Paige '84-104
Switzcr, Katherine Flora '84-104
fW\
1
Tan, Wooi Yi '81-79, 83, 150
Tapper, Karen Lee '81-70, 86, 87, 151
Taylor, Margaret Ann '83-67, 78, 90, 113
Taylor, Mary Jane '83-113
Thompson, Joyce Barbara '81-67, 78, 70,
84, 151
Thompson, Myric '84-83, 104
Todd, Alice Margaret '82-74, 79
Toms, Sarah Elizabeth '81-82, 85, 151
Toney, Cheryl Cassandra '84-83, 104
Torrencc, Edythe Anne '84-67, 104
Townsend, Marietta Irene '81-151
Tudor, Martha Anne '83-113
Tuttle, Martha Ellen '83-113
II V
Veal, Christine Ann '82-66, 119
Veal, Tracy Yvonne '84-83, 104
Vela, Deanna Marie '84-104
w
Walden, Elizabeth Diane '83-78, 113
Wall, Susan Thorp '81-67, 152
Wannamakcr, Dora Tracy '82-70, 76, 78,
92
Wannamakcr, Luci Neal '81-70, 71, 86,
152
Wannamakcr, Susan Claire '81-66, 71,
72, 86, 152
Wannamakcr, Tallcy Keitt '82-68, 87,
120
Ward, Charlotte Canham '84-96, 104
Warren, Susan Elaine '83-94, 113
Waters, Hayley Ann '84-74, 82, 96, 104
Waters, Martha Elise '82-73, 77, 92, 95,
97, 120
Waters, Pamela Gail 84-104
Weaver, Ann Barniwell '84-92, 95, 96,
104
Webb, Chandra Yvette '84-66, 93, 104
Webster, Karen Stacy '81-67, 79, 152
Wech, Elizabeth 81-153
Welch, Kathleen Noel '84-105
Whetscl, Marcia Cay '83-66, 67, 78, 113
Whipple, Karen Elizabeth 81-90, 153
While, Barbara Ellen '83-105
White, Cynthia Lynn '84-74, 84, 105
Whitley, Lena Frances '84-84, 105
Whitten, Alice Murrell '84-72, 105
Whitten, Susan Carrington '83-67, 82,
86, 113
Wickrema, Rasanjali Spec.-83, 120
Wilfong, Donna Louise '84-105
Wildes, Katherine Kirkland '84-95, 105
Willey, Carol Ann '81-67, 153
Willoughby, Mary Elisabeth '84-67, 84,
90, 105
Wilson, Elizabeth Nell '83-81, 113
Wilson, Suzanne '83-91
Wimberly, Lynda Joyce '81-68, 73, 86,
153
Winter, Meredith Lynn 82-93, 95, 120
Wiseman, Harriet '81-154
Wong, Terri '81-94, 154
Woods, Sharon Lynn '83-120
Wooldridge, Dana '83-94, 113
Wooldridge, Marty Lynn '84-84, 105
Wooley, Ann McLaouglin '82-67, 68, 80,
120
Wright, Charlotte Frances '83-91, 113
Wright, Dana Elizabeth '83-84, 113
XY
Yandle, Lisa Carol '84-105
Yoshimura, Debra Naomi '81-154
Young, Elizabeth O'Hear '82-66, 79, 82,
120
z
Zurek, Cataline '83-67, 84, 85, 113
159
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Scarcity discussed
Issues Of
Environment
On Tuesday, January 27, and
Wednesday, January 28, the Agnes
Scott campus became the scene for
the Atlanta Environmental
Symposium III. Classes were
cancelled on Wednesday so that the
students and faculty could attend
the special events. The lectures and
panel discussions were open to the
public.
The directors of the Symposium
included Agnes Scott professors
Steve Hayworth, Robert Leslie, and
Harry Wistrand. In their words, the
purpose of the Symposium was to
discuss "the implications of limited
resources on future human
endeavors" and to "point to
alternative resources and changes in
the current consumption patterns
and lead to suggestions for changes
in lifestyle and values which could
lessen the impact of scarcity."
A number of distinguished
speakers participated in the
Symposium. On Tuesday night,
Barry Commoner, the director of the
Center for the Biology of Natural
Systems at Washington University
and a previous presidential
candidate, gave the Introductory
Address.
On Wednesday morning, Robert
Cahn, Frederick Ferre and Eugene
Odum took part in a Panel
Discussion "Environmental Ethics:
A Humanistic Perspective."
David Orr gave the Luncheon
Address. A former political science
professor at Agnes Scott, he is now
co-director of the Meadowbrook
Project in Arkansas. Afterwards,
Noel Erskine, Elizabeth and David
Dodson Gray, and civil rights leader
Joseph Lowrey participated in a
second panel discussion,
"Environmental Ethics: A
Theological Perspective."
William Irwin Thompson, director
of the Lindisfarne Association, gave
the final address Wednesday night
and drew the Symposium to its
close.
A solar question
SUNNY
TIMES
AHEAD?
On January 28, 1981, Agnes Scott
commenced the Environmental
Symposium with an exciting lecture by
a prominent environmentalist Barry
Commoner. Among other issues, such
as overpopulation and food supply, the
speaker stressed current problems
stemming from the scarcity of oil as a
finite resource. According to
Commoner, our nation's energy
problem is not focused so much on the
limited amount of crude oil as on the
reduced accessibility to remaining
quantities. He emphasized that we as a
nation must continue to develop and
utilitze the sun as an infinite resource,
stating further that U.S. automobile
manufacturers have the technology to
mass produce solar-powered cars, but
that maximum captial gain has not yet
been achieved. In Commoner's words,
we are "... subject to imported oil,
gas guzzlers, decaying railroads
because decisions have been made not
in the national interest but in the
name of someone who wants to
maximize capital." Throughout his
lecture. Commoner stressed that the
people of our nation must govern the
system of production of energy, and
that we must and can depend on the
sun for the majority of our energy
needs.
160
l-k.
Eugene Odom, professor of Ecology and Director,
Institute of Ecology, U.Ga., spoke on "Environmental
Ethics: A Humanist Perspective" in a panel discussion
during the morning session of the symposium.
Amy Potts listens as David Gray, co-ordinator of the
Boston Institute, discusses the fine points of scarcity
with Eugene Odum.
Student Opinion
REACTIONS
VARIED
The Atlanta Environmental Symposium III
has come and gone, and for two days Scott
students watched as famous lectures,
environmentalists, and assorted interested and
curious people populated the campus. But how
did the Agnes Scott student benefit from the
Symposium, and what was her reaction to it?
On Barry Commoner:
"I agreed with what he said. Americans are
going to have to change their goals from profit
maximization to more concern for the
community."
"Everything he said I'd heard before."
"He was anti-defense, anti-capitalism, anti-
corporation, anti-oil, anti-politics, anti-
everything except pro-Commoner."
On the morning discussion:
"The morning program was excellent,
especially Ferre-very intelligent, well-spoken
man."
"More effective if they had had fewer
speakers."
"Thompson was positively cosmic."
"Odum was really good. I understand now
why he is called the 'father of ecology'.
On David Orr:
"His commune out west is a good idea, but
it should not be backed by the federal
government."
"He didn't answer questions well, especially
for urban dwellers . . . who needs a compost-
toilet in their apartment?"
On the afternoon discussion:
"It was the best by far!"
"Elizabeth Gray was excellent. She made the
session-a dynamic speaker."
An overall view of the Symposium:
"It really made you think a lot about where
your interests lie-where energy and the
environment are concerned. '
"I'm sorry more students didn't come."
"I think the Symposium was needed. The
professors in charge did an excellent job in
organizing it, and I definitely hope we can
have it here at Scott next year."
I think it was an honor. "
161
';:!!'f?r^i^-!g'!gflF;'g^?-!lSW;fS'ji:!Si:i!;:!^:g;iJ!giL^^
iiimiiiiiiiiniiiiiiir'— ^-'*-'""-*'"""'"
mmiimmmttui
on the lighter side of pohtics
Remember the Moral Majority? Of course you do! It's shelved in your memories
along with the rest of 1980. Jerry Falwell and his flock appeared near the end of
the close campaign between the peanut vender and the B-rated movie star. It was a
complicated election, made even more so by the mis-named Moral Majority blindly
staggering amidst the Congressional leaders, some of whom were nearly drunk
with their own conservatism.
Memory sparked? Sure, you say . . . but why bring up an IM-moral majority in
this yearbook? Because the headline is amusing and, admit it, got your attention.
And we'd like to make a point: whether action is restrictive conservatism or wild
immorality is judgmental opinion. If we could learn to practice control over our
judgment, the judgments of others could not control us. After all, conservatism
without mischief is dull; likewise, fun without restraint can be immoral.
At Agnes Scott, we're neither immoral nor a majority. Each of us women finds
our own freedom somewhere between the fun and the serious. The college years are
good times to tromp the mid-ground, searching for our moral niche. The searching
is half the fun ... no wonder it's called a "happy medium."
Immoral Majority
1 '|S9 -^
V!
163
Our Subject Today Is:
STUDYING
That, of course, is what we are
here for. Sooner or later, in the
name of studying, we all must pass
through the hallowed halls of
McCain Library. Whether you need
to research a history paper, keep up
with current events, or do some
reserved reading, the library is the
place for you.
Unfortunately, many Scotties
claim that they hate to study in the
library and cite various reasons
why. It is too hot. It is too cold. It
is too quiet. You cannot play your
beach music, disco music, rock
music, or any music at full blast,
the way you do when you study in
your room. Worst of all, you cannot
bring your Tab or popcorn or
Tootsie Rolls-items for study-into
the library.
To all these claims and more, may
we say: Poppycock!!
The library is a wonderful place
to study!! (It is also a heck of a
good place to take a nap.) What
most people fail to realize is that
you can find a number of
interesting and entertaining things
to do when the Econ. is drier than
ever and you need a break.
-64
nd now.
may the Silhouette present for your
maximum enjoyment its list of "Fun
and Games at the Library."
1. Go on a wild animal hunt! See
how many animals you can spot
carved in masonic splendor among
the nooks and crannies of our
library. Find the crocodiles. The
squirrels. The unicorns! They're all
there.
2. Read a magazine. The library
has 780 subscriptions. Grab a copy
of THE COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF
WORLD BUSINESS or SLAVIC
REVIEW and enjoy!
3. Go to the fourth floor stacks
and build your very own scale
model of Fort Sumter with copies of
the OFFICIAL RECORDS OF THE
UNION AND CONFEDERATE
ARMIES. Re-enact the War of
Northern Aggression.
4. Call Big Al's and ask them to
deliver 32 steak subs and 16 giant
pizzas, plus 49 large Tabs, to the
front desk. Watch the librarians
turn purple.
5. Hide a dozen alarm clocks in
strategic bookshelves on the
library's main floor. Set them for
8:45 p.m. At 8:40 p.m., position
yourself on the top of the Hub and
wait for the explosion.
6. Play "chicken" with the
elevator doors.
7. Look at old Silhouettes. 1918 is
an interesting year. See how much
we have improved!
8. If all else fails, take a nap!! But
don't snore. You don't want to
disturb the people who have work
to do.
Next time you go to the library,
keep this list in mind! And
remember-all study and no play
makes a Scottie a very dull gal.
f€4
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165
StaMMKBS.iiffll'* ^fi^fr'V.if
MlfT
Mirtha, Molly and Gus Cochran with
Smooter
Steve and Eloise Carter with Agnes
Erik Hogan
Not all our favorite campus personalities are registered stu- routinely over familiar brick walks, that gracious lady who
dents, faculty and staff; rather, some may affectionately be tempts our palates with her reception goodies-they all contri-
called "extensions" of aforementioned figures. Those toddlers bute to that added dimension of our lives as students,
that brighten up Black Cat picnics, those pooches that bounce
Brigitte Hogan
A DIFFERENCE
168
IN DATING
169
split Personalities
Double Majors
We'd Like To See
Classical/Prep
(Classics-Business Prep)
Confused Connie
112 Disturbed Lane
Insane, Indiana 00000
Dear Miss Connie:
We received your letter regarding the difficulties you
are having in making the choice of an intended major. Our
staff realizes that deciding between your father's choice of
business and your inclination towards classics is quite an
arduous task. To ease your mental anixiety, we would like to
suggest a new double major, Classics/Prep.
This Prep, however, does not refer to fashion; rather,
our Classics/Prep major is a coalescence of the classics and
business prep. Such a major would allow you to continue
your devotion to the finer aspects of past civilizations,
plus satisfy your father's preoccupation with business.
Possible job opportunities after graduation include working
as a cashier at an auction and researching the inflationary
spiral of ancient Rome. We hope our department has been
helpful in the alleviation of your "major dilemma."
Sincerely yours.
E
/AMPAIGrN
T.J. Successful
Director of the Dept. of Majors
170
Psycho/Ceramics
(Psychology-Art)
Case Study: Sally Psychosis is
faced with a severe case of
"major-depression." For most of
her college career, she has been
quite content to major in
psychology. This obsession with
the wonders of the mind,
however, has suddenly taken a
tremendous shift into the recesses
of Sally's mind, in favor of
ceramics. Leading analysts believe
this dramatic shift may have
stemmed from an accident which
occured in the fourth year of
Sally's cognitive and physical
development.
Four year-old Sally was
pretending to be "plaster woman"
in her mother's ceramic shop, a
character she saw the night
before on Hollywood Horrors. In
order to make her performance
more realistic, she proceeded to
cover herself in plaster and climb
into the huge Aring kiln. Sally's
mother was the first to admit the
success of the performance, for it
took two weeks to chip the
hardened plaster from the little
"plaster woman's" body.
Psychologists involved in the case
study think that during these two
weeks of "sculpting," some of the
plaster fumes seeped into Sally's
system and have since begun to
emerge.
Possible Therapy: After much
deliberation, psychology's leading
minds have suggested a new
"double-major" for Sally,
Psycho/Ceramics. This alternative
would alleviate Sally's difficulty
in coping with a "double
interest" and the possibility of
developing a "double personality"
in the future. Such therapy is
also recommended for any
individual suffering from similar
symptoms of "major-depression."
Famous Psycho/Ceramic Major:
Picasso, Laugh-In body painter?
and cast, the architect of Midfield
Termnal at the Atlanta airport.
Astro/Logical
(Astronomy-Philosophy)
Does dialectical reasoning have your
head spinning in an ecliptic? Do
you like to gaze out toward Pluto
and dream of Utopian societies? (Do
you perceive a certain logic in tea
leaves and moon signs?) If so, a
double major in astronomy and
philosophy may be in the stars for
you.
Bio/Degradable
(Biology-Math)
As a sophomore, you are faced
with a major decision. You relish
calculus and the Kreb's Cycle. You
feel torn between derivitives and
fruit flies. How will you choose?
Don't . . . double major instead! The
girls who consider this major are
truly intelligent, truly successful,
and fru/y sadistic.
171
Haili&lih--';'JiiiKAtiWfii);«;il3ilil»b«M»i;^
The Lighter Side Of Majors:
What You Think You'll Do
I
Bible & Religion
Biology
Chemistry
Classics
Economics
English
French
History
Math
Music
Physics
Political Science
Psychology
Sociology
Theatre
"Advertising or marketing. "-Kitty Cralle "Design Beth Maisano's album
covers. "-Margaret Clark "Plastic surgery and a free-lance artist. "-Susan
Glover
"Teach elementary school, maybe in a private religious school. "-Leanne
Ade
"Dance Therapy. "-Sarah Campbell "Vet school, grad school, or biological
retail sales. "-Jenny Howell "Grad school, horticulture. "-Mildred Pinnell
"Industrial or technical field. "-Lydia Reasor "Medical school or technical
sales (with a chemical background). "-Lynda Wimberly
"Grad school in classical studies. "-Carol Chapman
"Stocks, bonds, investments. "-Marjory Silvewright "Work for NATO."-
Stephanie Segars
"Newspaper advertising. "-Wendy Merkert "English lit, maybe teaching. "-
Nancy Nelson "Advertising, publishing, or journalism. "-Monica Shuler
"Ph.D in clinical psychology (must be fluent in French or German.)"-
Bonnie Etheridge
"Novel writer, eventually history professor. "-Alice Harra "Paperchase-
study law. "-Susan Nicol
"Architecture. "-Ila Burdette "Computer analyst, business. "-Susan Barnes
"Graduate school in math at UVa. "-Susan Kennedy
"Church music. "-Jan Jackson "Special education, music therapy. "-Becky
Lowry
"Work for a technical-oriented company in public relations or sales. "-
Missy Carpenter "Aeronautics engineering."-Amy Craddock
"Law school. "-Lucia Rawls "Teach political science on the secondary level
orhigher. "-Susan Hutcheson
"Teach elementary school. "-Beth Young "Law school in sunny
California. -Karen Tapper "Rehabilitation in juvenile deliquent field. "-
Elise Waters
"Rock'n roll star. "-Beth Maisano "Arrange marriages in Sri Lanka. "-
Peggy Davis
"Make a hit recording of 'The Lady is a Tramp' and live off the
residuals. "-Liz Steele
MATH: calculate exact laundry change.
( . . . What You'll Really Do.)
Art
You'll probably: draw grafitti on Marta station walls,
starve with pride, get lost in the High Museum, and
work for a coloring book company.
Bible & Religion
Possibilities: be a hit at cocktail parties, deprogram
juvenile cult members, appreciate re-runs of "The Flying
Nun," and chant along with Krishna members at the
airport.
Biology
Qualifies you to: say "take two aspirin and call me in
the morning," translate Bio-Rhythm charts, pump
innocent little mice full of carcinogenic substances, and
explain the sex-life of Drosophila.
Chemistry
Entitles you to: determine the chemical make-up of
Letitia Pate food, write scripts for "The Incredible Hulk,"
deal with your own chemical imbalance, and open up a
clone outlet store.
Classics
You might: work as a parking lot attendant at vintage
car auctions, determine the difference between Champale
and a bottle of truly aged wine, attend showings of
"Ben-Hur".
Economics
Qualifies you to: play the stocks on Wall Street,
bounce checks and blame it on the world economic
situation, and pass Go and collect $200.
English
Maybe: be a den mother or window washer, write
verses for Hallmark Cards, compete for the world's
record for last-minute paper writing, and identify every
phallic symbol in PARADISE LOST.
French
Entitles you to: be the head waiter at the the Magic
Pan, be a mud-wrestler on the banks of the Seine, gets
drunk with dignity in the French Quarter of New
Orleans, and ride with the Canadian Mounties and
always get your man.
German
You can: sell snitzel at the county fair, rebuild the
Hindenberg, act as a drill co-ordinator for a marching
band, drink warm beer without feeling nauseated, and
raise champion dachshunds.
Greek
Qualifies you to: date safely within the fraternities
with no chance of mixing up the SAE's and ATO's, wear
a laurel wreath around your head at various sporting
events, ana pronounce "gyro" correctly when ordering
one at Athens' Pizza.
History
Possibilities: retrace the path of Paul Revere's ride,
discuss Louis XIV's problems as if they were important,
attend DAR meetings, and climb up your own family
tree.
Latin
You could: conduct tours of the Vatican's ancient
library, feel right at home at toga parties, teach pig-Latin
in rural barnyards, and speak the right language in a
cemetery.
Math
Qualifies you to: help your children with their math
homework, open an SAT prep school (students must
score the same 1480 that you did), and earn a master's
degree in advanced finger counting.
Music
Entitles you to: play "Chopsticks" with correct finger
and body posture, explain the phenomenon of New
Wave music, and be an organgrinder at Lenox Square.
Physics
You might: pull all-nighters, be a curator for the
Albert Einstein Museum, start a prism manufacturing
company, and understand why water flows downhill.
Political Science
Possibilities: vote for the losing candidate and still
justify your decision, master the art of evading the
issues, and hide hundred dollar bills in your coat
pockets.
Psychology
You could: Use your friends as case studies,
understand the underlying plots of "Fantasy Island," and
take a trip downtown during rush hour without losing
your sanity.
Sociology
Entitles you to: write a book about the behavioral
patterns of women at a sale, explain the migratory
pattern of elderly Northerners to Florida, and dance like
an Aborigine instead of a Scottie.
Spanish
Qualifies you to: take a Taco Bell vacation, drink
tequila on a beach towel in your backyard and have
visions of killer sombreros, act as a tour guide for illegal
aliens at the Tex-Mex border, and be a waitress in
Miami.
Theatre
Possibilities: direct plays for open house at your child's
kindergarden, explain your behavior at a party as merely
being practice for a new part in a production, and land
guest shots on "Love Boat" and "The Muppet Show. "
PSYCH: use your friends as case studies
CHEM: deal^^^^^^iul imbalances.
f¥^ • %t
^ !■
LIBERAL ARTS: stand in line for wclf<.rc| ^^ |
■Mi : ^^m
1 1
P
^Be iL/v ^j^^^B ** j^l
^
%
^s^
■ %u
■.
• ^si
MM^Mi
fer —
;-i:s^a^
P<^
r A Liberal-Arts Major
% By Carol Jin Evans
I
And then, of course, they say:
how quaint; and what are you going to do with that?
What am I going to do with it?
As though these four phenomenal years
were an object I could cart away from college-
a bachelor's degree across my back like an ermine jacket,
or my education hung from a ceiling on a string.
What am I going to do with it?
Well, I thought perhaps I'd put it in a cage
to see if it multiplies or does tricks or something
so I could enter it in a circus
and realize a sound dollar-for-dollar return
on my investment.
Then, too, I am exploring the possibility of
whipping it out like a folding chair
at V.F. W. parades and Kiwanis picnics.
I might have it shipped and drive it through Italy.
Or sand it down and sail it.
What am I going to do with it?
I'll tell you one thing:
I'm probably never goiqg to plant sod around it.
You see, I'm making it a definitive work:
174
repapering parts of my soul
that can never be toured by my friends;
wine glass balanced in one hand,
warning guests to watch the beam
that hits people on the head
when they go downstairs to see the den. A
You don't understand —
I'm using every breath to tread water
in all-night swimming competitions I
with Hegel, Marx and Wittgenstein; |
lama reckless diver fondling the bottom of civilization I
for ropes of pearls; I
/ am whispering late into the night on a river bank with Zola;
I am stopping often, soaking wet and exhausted, to weep
at the Bastille.
What am I going to do with it?
I'm going to sneak it away from my family
gathered for my commencement ■
and roam the high desert
making love to it.
eprinted 1980 by permission of The Chronicle of
.ligher Education, Inc.
175
THE COMPLEAT YEARBOOKE
The Silhouetters have again accomplished a feat of
unmatched proportion. This new edition, com-
pletely revised, captures the drama and intensity of
life at one of America's most prestigious colleges for
women. It is ''must" reading for anyone who de-
lights in b7 consecutive pages of mug shots or seeks
to wallow in nostalgia.
"... unlike any other 1981 Silhouette ever published."
Dan Troy, American Yearbook Co.
"Magnificent color sections-witty, creative and pertinent."
Alice Harra, Student Life Publications
"Excellent photography ... a vital part of the book and a
panacea for copy ills."
Lu Ann Ferguson and Phil Houston, Camera Connections
"A well-financed endeavor. Impressive list of prosperous
advertisers and generous patrons."
Cina Philips, Acme Advertising
"Martha Sheppard is an unparalled guide for the yearbook
'flock.' In the future, however, she should stick with sheep-
it would be better for her sanity."
Susan Nicol, Life with Martha
"I look forward with eager anticipation and rose-tinted vision to
the 1981 revised edition."
Mildred Pinnell, Associate Masochist
176
DAN TROY We help make good times
•publications CONSULTANT|g^, ,^^ ^ ^.^^^.^^
1752 East Bank Drive
Marietta, Georgia
872-7066 993-1578
177
mratumms W mm
stu<fmts i^^ncs Scctt Come —
wm^cxccmceris
sUd tn& stamaw.
Marketing and Communications Services for Universities ro)! ^r^JlTEpL
2161 MONROE DRIVE, N.E., ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30324 • 87S-0421
(Slkmxen (Attb '^Cmatbrg
1620 LaVista Rd., N. E.
Atlanta, Ga. 30329
(404) 636-1442
Odorless Cleaning Custom Hand Cleaning
CITADEL M CORPORATION
2700 CUMBERLAND PARKWAY . ATLANTA, GA. 30339
BRYANT UTHOGRAPHING COMR^NY
510 Van Heusen Blvd. ,N.W,, P.O.Box 19844, Station N,
Atlonta.Georgia 30325, Area Code (404) 355-3980
Congratulations
WRIGHT-BROWN ELECTRIC INC.
1111 Capital Ave. S.W.
Atlanta, Georgia 30315
^ ^, CROSBY
if^J INSURANCE
AGENCY
THE CROSBY
INSURANCE AGENCY
1789 CLAIRMONT
ROAD
POST OFFICE BOX 33097
DECATUR, GEORGIA
30033
325-3970
DeKalb's Biggest Little
Dealer
SPENCER'S
TIRE & SALES
COMPANY
NEW-USED-
RECAPPING
Phone 378-7565
MARGIE
402 E. HOWARD AVE.
DECATUR, GA. 30030
178
^l^e ^mi«c of tljc ^ctientli (gable, Jltb.
(yflc£K,nneu's (ApolLcary Snc.
542 Church Street
Decatur, Georgia 30030
Phone 378-5408
/ Apex Services
CECIL FERGUSON
General Manager
460 ENGLEWOOD AVE.,
S.E.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
30315
(404) 622-1331
METRO REFRIGERATION
SUPPLY, INC.
WHOLESALE ONLY
3901 Green Industrial Way
Chamblee, GA 30341
Phone (494) 458-9514
Air Conditioning • Refrigeration
• Heating • Accessories
Compliments
Of
SHARIAN INC.
The World 0(
Travel
Is AWoriO
EXECUTIVE
TRAVEL,
INC.
HOW MUCH DOES A TRAVEL
AGENT COST YOU?
USUALLY NOTHING.
HE SAVES YOU MONEY:
YOUR VACATION STARTS i/VITM
EXECUTIVE TRAVEL
AND SO DOES YOUR
BUSINESS TRIP
CALL US FOR
•Your Vacation Trips
•Your Business Travel
•Cruises
•Charier Fhghis
•Group Trips
NORTH DEKALB MALL (Near Rich's)
321-1122
/i^di-ff^^g
hdrJIJbdLVei
CHARLIE MIZELL
DEBBIE SANDERS
KIM HILL
548 CHURCH STREET
DECATUR, GEORGIA
30030
404/378-4231
OMwan
EMORY
STANDARD
1574 N. Decatur Road
Atlanta, Ga. 30307
Ph. 373-7400
Mechanic On Duty
Road Service
Complete Car Care
PYE-BARKER
WELDING SUPPLY COMPANY
871 Wheeler Street, N.W. • Atlanta, Georgia 30318
RESEARCH
GASES
CRYOGENIC
EQUIPMENT
WELDING
SUPPLIES
COMPLIMENTS OF
FRANK G. LAKE LUMBER CO.
100 Haynes St. N.W. Atlanta, Ga.
688-4368
179
Our Thanks to
SHAW INDUSTRIES
for donating the carpeting in
the Hub,
given in honor of:
Margaretta Lumpkin Shaw
Anne Jones Sims
Irene Shaw Grigg
Majorie Soar Miller
Eleanor McCarty Cheney
Betty Bowman Shaw
Barrien Lumpkin Long
Student Government Association
1980-1981
180
FOSTER
L.B. FOSTER COMPANY
P.O. Box 47367
Doraville, Georgia 30362
Pipe, Rail & Track, Piling,
Construction Equipment,
Highway Products
WALTER MITTYS
RESTAURANT & BAR
Beneom Allonlos New Intown Dining legeod
Are Some o( Aflanto'i Rneit Jon Muslclon]
CHARLY WILLIAMS PIANO
JAMES MARTIN DRUMS
NEIL STARKEY BASS
HOWARD NICHOLSON SAX
DARWIN STRICKLAND DRUMS
JAMES HUDSON SAX
GEORGE GRIER BASS
JONRICOSOTT DRUMS
RICK KELLER BASS
AND A FEW SURPRISES
SUN - IHURS 900 1 00 A.M S2 00 CCMR
F«l - S*I 9 00 2 M A.M U 00 COVW
8i6 8i8 N, HIGHLAND AVE. Nf 876 711^
TlKa BtLXXS NOKIH O l»>CE a IfCN ATtMENWOQ)
NO RtSmAnCNS/VALET PiftWNG AVilL^Blt
ATLANTA FALCONS
For Ticket Information
Call 325-2667 (Fal-cons)
.30030 ^M.
FINE VIOLINS, VIOLAS, CELLI AND BOWS
(404) 377-3419
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE
CLASS OF 1981
BURNS
INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY SERVICES,
INC.
3301 Buckeye Rd., N.E.
Atlanta, Georgia 30341
(404) 452-2714
*■ Security Personnel
* Management Consulting
* Investigations
* Electronic Security
ALL IN ONE
KITCHEN CENTER
MANUFACTURERS
REPRESENTATIVE
KING COMPACT
KITCHENS
Compact Kitchens Where
Space Is Vital-From
30" to 87" Wide
ALL-IN-ONE
KITCHEN CENTERS
174 14TH N.W.
874-7529
GUY T. GUNTER JR.
& ASSOC.
Best Wishes
LATHEM TIME
RECORDER CO., INC.
Manufacturers Of
Industrial Timekeeping
Machines
200 Selig Drive, S.W.
Atlanta, Georgia 30336
J
181
Stewart-Greene Co.
Wholesale Fruits and
Produce
Building F • Units 11 &
12
FOREST PARK,
GEORGIA
BILL GREENE
366-9611
A NEW IDEA IN CAR
REPAIRS
WE CALL IT "CUSTOMER
SATISFACTION"
DECATUR
EXXON
SERVICE
CENTER
307 CLAIRMONT ROAD
• DECATUR, GEORGIA
J. RALPH 5KILLERN
OWNER/MANAGER
373-6258 373-6259
vS-"*:
'^^
ATDeNS
piZZA
1369 CLAIRMONT ROAD
DECATUR. GEORGIA 30033
Ieej
PERMA-CLAD
OF GEORGIA
(A DIV OF ATLANTA VENETIAN BLIND MFG CO.)
4400 AM WILER ROAD • P.O. BOX 47160 • DORAVILLE, GA.30362
COMPLIMENTS OF
CHATTANOOGA
GUERNSEY PETROLEUM
CORPORATION
,( fEQUIPMENT COMFANYl
1084 HOWELL MILL ROAD, N.W., ATLANTA, GEORGIA
30318 PHONE 404-875-0256
COMPLETE ENGINEERING LAYOUTS • STEEL SHELVING • SHOP
EQUIPMENT • LOCKERS • PALLET RACKS
Manuers Tavern
602 North Highland Avenue, N.E.
Atlanta, Georgia 30307
525-3447
4877 Memorial Drive
Stone Mountain, Georgia 30083
296-6919
FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS ONLY NEIGHBORHOOD BAR
OWNERS MANUEL & ROBERT MALOOF
182
BSlNA/
B&W SUMMERS
ELECTRIC SUPPLY
A DIVISION OF SUMMERS ELECTRIC COMPANY
BEAPINGS
AND DRIVES NC
Sixteen LOCATIONS
MACON 912-743-6711
ATLANTA 404-875-9305
HAPEVILLE 404-766-1605
ROME 404-234-0861
VALDOSTA 912-242-0214
ALBANY 912-432-5158
SANDERSVILLE .... 912-552-5174
NORCROSS 404-449-6720
ATHENS 404-546-8640
THOMASVILLE .... 912-228-1640
GAINESVILLE 404-532-0431
DUBLIN 912-272-3113
TIFTON 912-382-2125
AUGUSTA 404-722-7355
NEWNAN 404-251-1560
CLEVELAND-TENN . 615-472-3291
FALK . REDUCERS & COUPLINGS •
DAYCO V DRIVES
DODGE TRANSMISSION
DAYCO INDUSTRIAL & HYDRAULIC
HOSE AND FITTINGS
LABORERS'
INTERNATIONAL
UNION off North America
MORESCHI ■UILOINO
LOCAL NO. 438
F.C. GULLATTE, President J.B. UNDERWOOD, Secretary-Treasurer
AMOS BEASLEY, JR., Business Manager HARRY PARHAM, Recording
Secretary
Executive Board
LESTER SHINGLES
SAMSON GARRETT
ALFRED OGLESBY
AFFILIATED WITH AFL-CIO, GEORGIA STATE AFL-CIO, ATLANTA,
GEORGIA LABOR COUNCIL,
ATLANTA BUILDING TRADES COUNCIL
P.O. BOX 5346 • 1004 EDGEWOOD AVE., N.E. • ATLANTA, GEORGIA
30307 • TEL. 522-5872, 552-5315-6
Compliments of
a
Friend
Fulton Supply Company
Industrial — Textile — Contractors — Supplies And
Equipment
"Serving Georgia Industry since 1914"
Atlanta — Columbus — Carrolton
J
183
Pittsburgh Paints center
1065 Columbia Dr.
Decatur Ga. 30030
289-0756
General Heating
^^^^^^=and
Aip Conditioning
Services. Inc.
3828 Oakcliff Industrial Court
Doraville, Georgia 30340
(404) 448-9770
FOURTEEN WEST REALTY
I / 799 Chirmom Road
* Dccarur. Georgia 30033
Q
..When Your Goal
Is QUALITY
BROWN'S
ONE HOUR
MARTINIZING
1317 Columbia Dr.
Decatur, Georgia
30032
FULTON SUPPLY
COMPANY
342 Nelson St. S.W.
Atlanta, Ga.
Tel. 688-3400
WE BUY GOLD
Especially class rings. Competitive prices,
honest weighing on accurate scales.
Phone for prices: (404) 634-7359
THOMAS B. HAMILTON CO., INC.
2689 Sweet Briar Rd., Decatur, GA
(Near, but not in. North DeKalb Mall)
184
^^^?!!S^
tDNr\
TASTEFUL ATTIRE
FOR THE
CONTEMPORARY WOMAN
■<«iiiii<H3«iM?i?«jj?iignafi
250 Spring Si.
Allanta, Ga . 30303
q^poNfer
Compliments of
GOODE BROS.
POULTRY
P.O. BOX 87130
COLLEGE PARK, GA.
30337
P.J. HALEY'S
Beach Nites:
Wednesday and Saturday!
jjsViS*-
"Bottled Under Aultiority of "The Coca-Cola
Company by THE ATLANTA COCA-COLA
BOTTLING COMPANY.
"!'„,. . mil im I.BH ii»i»uiii»i»uiiiu»'iiiiiM»MiLiiiuiiiiiij_M!uiiiiijauuuujjLLl!Ly!k^^
185
Caravai^'s
Crab Stjack
AHat;ta's I
Crab Sljack and Tavern
'i<^^
«i.^^^^^«
4761 MEMORIAL DRIVE
DECATUR, GA 30032
(404)292-1305
SI
sHsnfs .
RICK LEWIS
WAYNE SAEL
"If it has anything to do
with sound, we discount
it."
3877 Covington Hwy.
Decatur, Georgia 30032
(404) 288-7876
Sales, Service &
Installation
THE
DUNWOODY CRIER
1534 Dunwoody Village
Pkwy.
Dunwoody, Georgia 30338
DECATUR
CHIROPRACTIC
LIFE CENTER
708 CHURCH STREET
DECATUR, GA, 30030
(404) 373-LlFE
BY APPOINTMENT
Look At It
Our Way
Through a Bausch & Lomb
Illuminating Stand Magnifier
For hobbies or work the Illu-
minating Stand Magnifier
provides precision mag
nification with light
|ust where it's
needed- And it
leaves both
hands free.
The 4" X 2"
lens of scratch-
resistant optical glass
provides large area mag-
nification that's uniform and sharp from
edge to edge. Lens and light are adjust-
able to the best working angle FXPIRFc;
Priced at $21 95 POSTPAID 6/31/81
Send your check or money order to dept 3 6
.^^L BenAteodows Company
WTB
WM. THORNTON BENTLEY CO., INC.
WORD PROCESSING SERVICE
103 N. McDONOUGH ST.
DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030
404-373-3693
GENERAL TYPING SERVICE
WORD PROCESSING
Multi-Original Resumae
MEMORY STORAGE FOR THESES
"Congratulations Class of '81"
103 N. McDonough St.
373-3693
Catering and Flowers for All OceasUma
2784 Jasmine Court. N. E.
Atlanta. Georgia 30345
939-2919
COLLEGE INM PACKAGE STORE
2683 E. College Ave.
Decatur, Georgia 30030
DAILY RENTALS AT REASONABLE RATES
FVANS
363-3983
Decatur Union 76 Service Center
COLUMBIA DRIVE CONNECTOR AT CHURCH ST.
Specializing in AU/Car/Care Service
PHONES ROAD SERVICE & WRECKER
378-1211 TUNE-UP
378-9290 AIR CONDITIONING
186
MARTIN & JONES
PRODUCE, INC.
CATERING TO HOTELS-RESTAURANTS
AND INSTITUTIONS
STATE FARMERS MARKET
FOREST PARK, GEORGIA 30050
H.M. (HANK) DALY
404/366-7650
MEMBER OF
MASC • AISC • FSEA
3187 PEACHTREE RD.-N.E.
ATLANTA, GA. 30305
CROWN
Save Every Mile!
Jim Harvard's Crown
225 Clifton St., S.E.
Atlanta, Ga. 30317
Open 24 Hours
Gasoline And Car-Wash
BROMLEY ANIMAL
CLINIC
1634 Northside Dr. N.W.
Atlanta, Georgia 30318
CM 1. FOR RFSFRVATIONS
Mtrle'B iiauitlionu (dottage
LUNCH SERVED MONDAY TRIDAY 1 1 30 - 2 10
PRIVATE PARTIES ALSO
30.13 NORTH DECATUR RD
SCOTTDAl E, CiA 30079
DECATUR TOOL
RENTAL
2852 NORTH DECATUR ROAD
DECATUR, GEORGIA 30033
(404)299-1234
John A. Davis
^^Soiitl] of J^i^ce^
COUNTRY FRENCH RESTAURANT & LOUNGE
ENCLOSED CAFE TERRACE
FREE PARKING
FRENCH FOLK SONGS
FEATURING
A DOUBLE
SIDED WOOD
BURNING FIREPLACE
FOR YOUR DINING
PLEASURE
DINNER SERVED 7 NIGHTS
LUNCH MON. THRU FRI
325-6963
MASTERCHARGE VISA
AMERICAN EXPRESS
2345 CHESHIRE BRIDGE RD.-
IN CHESHIRE SQUARE
Chili Dog
Cheeseburger
Bar-b-q
Chicken & Fish
Ice Cream
Banana Split
Shakes
JSuckfteab J^ousie of tKrabel Ml
brazier.
COMPLETE TRAVEL
SERVICE
AIR TICKETS
CRUISES
TOURS
Decatur
377-4984
TICKET DELIVERY
266-2951
DIRECT COMPUTER
LOBBY TOWER PLACE
3340 PEACHTREE RD. N.E.
RESERVATION SERVICE
ATLANTA, GA. 30326
187
. ■■--.-■^?>^^:^
Collegiate Clothes for
Less
3512 Broad St.
Chamblee. GA 30341
451-0650
leacher^ Fet
DECATUR
FEDERAL
Get the savings bug'
£
anacGCL
PHOTOGRAPHY, INC.
PHILIP L HOUSTON
PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY
404 - 636-5089
1549 ALDERBROOK ROAD
DECATUR. GEORGIA 30033
hoMEMAclE soups, SANdw'icliES & chili.
qAMEROOM, dARTS, pOol & shuFFlEbOARci.
Ken AncIerson, pRopRiETOR
2415 PIEDMONT
DEKALB MARINE INC.
3970 Glenwood Rd.
Decatur, Ga. 30032
1880 Johnson Rd., N.E. Atlanta
881-Moon
PINCKARD CLEANERS & LAUNDRY
612 Medlock Road
Decatur, Georgia 30033
188
^W^com class ofh
AGNES SCOTT
ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION
Our Thanks
To
Decatur Gown & Bridal
The
Silhouette
Congratulations
and best wishes
for the fiiture
FIDELITY
NATIONAL BANK
Downtown Decatur and Northlake • Momb.r FDIC
GET MORE OUT OF YOUR BANK THAN MONEY.
J
189
roNSULTlNG SINCE 1959
ANTHONY
ADVERTISING
SPECIALISTS IN UNIVERSITY &
COLLEGE YEARBOOK & HANDBOOK
ADVERTISING
A few pages of selected advertising will help defray soaring
printing costs. Student Publication Advisors and Publishers'
Representatives are welcome to call us for further information.
Our staff of professionals will work closely with you and your
publisher.
1600 TULLY CIRCLE SUITE 105 ATLANTA. GEORGIA 30329
(404) 329-0016
190
CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GRADUATING CLASS OF 1981
PLUMBERS & STEAMFITTERS LOCAL UNION NO. 72
BOB TIDWELL, PRESIDENT
TOM PAYNE,
Business Manager
BOB COKER,
BUS. REP.,
CHARLIE COX,
BUS. REP.
DOUGLAS WILLIAMS
FIN. SEC.-TREAS.
IB.
Amelia Karafofius
Broker
Computerized
Multiple
Listing Service
Don Davis Gulf Service
359 W. PONCE DE LEON AVENUE
DECATUR, GEORGIA
' BRAKE WORK • TUNE-UPS
' TIRES • BATTERIES • ACCESSORIES
ROAD SERVICE
WRECKER SERVICE
AUTOMATIC CAR WASH SERVICE AT ITS BEST
378-6751
378-9251
Bedfobsfcr* inns of Amencii, Inc.
()|5ei'ali()ns Office - Soiitheiisl Ri'^i
l()3r, Phoenix Blvd., Suite 12
AlhinUi, (;A :«):I4!I
THE
DECATUR
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
CHURCH AT
SYCAMORE
DECATUR, GEORGIA
3CX)30
378-1777
DECATUR INN
921 Church St.
Decatur, GA 30030
378-3125
PEACHTREE BANK
P
Peachtree bank offers you a full
line of banking services at a
location convenient to your
campus.
We are on the square in
Decatur at the Marta Station.
Banking hours: 9-4 pm Monday
thru Thursday 9-6 pm on Friday.
Phone: 455-8787.
At Peachtree Bank, we'll find a way. O
1
191
PHONE: 284-9914
^^^^ BUDDY OAKES GULF
f^l^T^ SERVICE
^^0^ TIRES • BATTERIES •
ACCESSORIES
ROAD SERVICE • AIR
CONDITIONING
MECHANIC ON DUTY
STATE INSPECTION
3568 MEMORIAL DR. AT
COLUMBIA
DECATUR, GEORGIA
Compliments Of
Charles T.
Bass, Jr.
Attorney At Law
MARY
MAC'S
LTD.
WALT'S
Beer &
Wine
Our Thanks To
Trust
Company
Bank
OLAN
MILLS
Photographers
THE APOTHECARY
LOUNGE
SPREEN
TOYOTA
117 Loyd St.
Atlanta, Georgia 30303
Senior Class
Section
Editors
Congratulations
Class Of '81
ECONOMY
PRINTING
THE
ORIGINAL
PANCAKE
HOUSE
192
L^
Congratulations
Class Of '81
GEORGE K'S
TAVERN
sa:€>xi.ca-.A.i!a-
LAUNDRY-DRY CLEANING-
DRAPERIES-CARPETS
Cleaner • Laundry • Storage
533 W. HOWARD AVENUE
DECATUR, GEORGIA 30030
Compliments Of
Scott Candler, Jr.
Decatur, Georgia
30030
PROGRESSIVE METHODS, INCORPORATED
A Complete line of Business Machines
CORONAMATIC 2200
• Your SMITH-CORONA
dealer in Decatur
CORONAMATIC 2500
SMITH-CORONA:
• RENT IBM 'Selectric'
and Smith-Corona
Coronamatic 2200 and
Corona matic 2500
models for term
papers.
IBM "Selectric" TYPEWRITER
• SERVICE and SALES
of portable
Smith-Corona
typewriters
124 Clairmont Ave., Decatur
377-1848/377-1884
H.G. Pines
Dick Dirksen
DARNELL'S 76 SERVICE
Mechanical and Transmission
Repairs
636-9611
2154 Briarcliff Rd., N.E.
Atlanta, Georgia 30329
Compliments
Of
DEARBORNE
ANIMAL
HOSPITAL
BURTON'S GRILL
1029 Edgewood Ave. N.E.
Atlanta, Georgia 30307
J
193
Congrats '81
THE SAILORS
Class Of '84
194
We try to please
over 600 women
every year.
Our C&S Decatur Square Office
caters to Agnes Scott students with
close by, convenient banking service
only a short distance from campus.
And with a network of Instant
Bankers throughout Georgia where
you can do all your regular banking
anytime. Fact is, you'll find that well
go out of our way to make banking
easier for you. Because we'd be
pleased to be your bank.
We're here.
Member FDIC
HUNIA
WINDY HILL
TERMINAL
I 75& 1-285
at Windy Hill Rd
inetla
DUNWOODY
TERMINAL
I 285 at
Ctiamblee-
Dunwoody Rd PRESIDENTIAL
Rad_^sson Inn DRIVE
TERMINAL
1-85 & I 285 at
Chamblee-Tucker Rd
STONE
MOUNTAIN
TERMINAL
I -285 at
Northside Airport Express
Full travel service facilities at each terminal.
Northside Travel, Inc.
MARIETTA 952-1601 CHAMBLEE 455-4507
STONE MT' 296-1676 DUNWOODY 394^900
195
•-•\ '-'^'•v-;-^vtii^9»^
seNioK pAReNx:s
PAITKONS
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. Baird
Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Boring
Margaret B. Cable
Dr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Chisholm
Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Coble
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Craig
Dr. and Mrs. Hugh H. Curnutt
Mr. and Mrs. E.M. DuBose
Mr. and Mrs. B.C. Ebinger
Dr. and Mrs. T. Gray Fountain
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson G. Griffith
Mr. and Mrs. Ed N. Harris
Ralph and Ingrid Hellender
The Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Robert W. Jewett
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Keys
Mr. and Mrs. S. John Klettner
Mr. and Mrs. William W. Kouts
Dr. and Mrs. Leon Lenoir, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence H. Long
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. McCrary
The McCunniff Family
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas McDonald
Dr. and Mrs. Donald McMillian
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Merrifield
Mr. and Mrs. M. Harris Mynatt
Sis and Jim Newsome
Mr. and Mrs. Roderick M. Nicol
Dr. and Mrs. Millard F. Perrin
Mr. and Mrs. Bernie Pye
Mr. and Mrs. William E. Segars
Mr. and Mrs. G.E. Sheppard
Mr. and Mrs. Mosby C. Toms
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Wimberly, III
Mr. and Mrs. R. Dan Winn
Many thanks also to our anonymous patrons.
196
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JOST3IS
COM^MNY
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